Listriodon


Listriodon is an extinct genus of pig-like animals that lived in Eurasia during the Miocene.

Description

Listriodon species were generally small in size. In morphology, they show many similarities with peccaries rather than modern pigs.
The lophodont teeth of Listriodon indicate that it was mostly, if not strictly, herbivorous. Peculiarly, their teeth resemble those of perissodactyls such as horses more than they do that of ruminants. This was the case because unlike ruminants, pigs lack a complex four-chambered stomach and therefore had to rely on their teeth to break down grasses and herbs.

Species

Many species of Listriodon have been named over the years, to the point that the genus became a wastebasket taxon. Over the years, many species have been moved into new genera, such as Kubanochoerus, Bunolistriodon and Lopholistriodon. Some species were found to be synonymous with others, such as Listriodon theobaldi and Listriodon pentapotamiae representing different genders of a single species.
Prothero lists four valid species:
  • Listriodon splendens
  • Listriodon pentapotamiae
  • Listriodon raetamanensis
  • ''Listriodon bartuensis''

    Species now placed in ''Bunolistriodon''

  • Listriodon akatikubas
  • Listriodon guptai
  • Listriodon intermedius
  • Listriodon latidens
  • Listriodon lockharti
  • ''Listriodon meidamon''

    Species now placed in ''Lopholistriodon''

  • ''Listriodon juba''

    Species now placed in ''Kubanochoerus''

  • ''Listriodon robustus''

    Species synonymous with ''L. splendens''

  • Listriodon aragoniensis
  • Listriodon mongoliensis
  • Listriodon lishanensis
  • ''Listriodon xinanensis''

    Species synonymous with ''L. pentapotamiae''

  • ''Listriodon theobaldi''

    Palaeobiology

Palaeoecology

Multiproxy isotopic analysis of the tooth enamel of L. splendens consisting of 87Sr/86Sr, δ18OCO3, and δ13C suggests that although it was primarily a browser, it consumed significant quantities of fruit and at times also fed on grass. Analysis of dental morphology and microwear of L. cf. L. splendens and L. aff. L. latidens suggests that the former was a more specialised folivore than the latter.

Palaeopathology

At the Middle Miocene site of Chabbar Syedan in Pakistan, only two specimens of L. pentapotamiae showed signs of enamel hypoplasia out of twenty-four sampled suids, suggesting that this palaeoenvironment was stable and characterised by minimal environmental disruptions.