Megalocnidae
Megalocnidae is an extinct family of sloths, native to the islands of the Greater Antilles from the Early Oligocene to the Mid-Holocene. They are known from Cuba, Hispaniola and Puerto Rico, but are absent from Jamaica. While they were formerly placed in the Megalonychidae alongside two-toed sloths and ground sloths like Megalonyx, recent mitochondrial DNA and collagen sequencing studies place them as the earliest diverging group basal to all other sloths. or as an outgroup to Megatherioidea. They displayed significant diversity in body size and lifestyle, with Megalocnus being terrestrial and probably weighing several hundred kilograms, while Neocnus was likely arboreal and similar in weight to extant tree sloths, at less than 10 kilograms.
Origin
It is thought that sloths arrived in the Caribbean from South America around the Eocene-Oligocene boundary about 33 million years ago, when there was a significant sea level drop caused by a glaciation episode. This has been associated with the GAARlandia hypothesis, where the Aves Ridge is suggested to have formed a land bridge during the interval, allowing overland migration into the Greater Antilles. The existence of such a land bridge has been questioned because of the lack of geological evidence for the Aves Ridge having been subaerially exposed as well as the fact that many other South American animals are absent from the Greater Antilles, making a complete land bridge unlikely. The earliest evidence suggesting the presence of sloths in the Caribbean is a partial femur from the Early Oligocene of Puerto Rico. Other pre-Pleistocene fossil remains include Imagocnus from the Early Miocene of Cuba, and an indeterminate species from the Late Miocene of the Dominican Republic.Description
Megalocnid sloths were relatively small compared to mainland ground sloths, though they were the largest mammals native to the Caribbean islands with the largest species Megalocnus rodens estimated to weigh around or, with the smallest genera Neocnus and Acratocnus estimated to only weigh.Ecology
Like other sloths megalocnids were probably folivores, with some authors suggesting that based on the anatomy of their limbs, that Neocnus and Acratocnus were likely climbing animals.Taxonomy
The taxonomy of Caribbean sloths is in flux, with the number of species present among the Pleistocene-Holocene taxa in question; some species are likely junior synonyms, while the diversity of some genera is probably understated. The mitochondrial DNA study suggests that Acratocnus ye and Parocnus serus are deeply divergent from each other, having split during the Oligocene, suggesting an early radiation within the group. An alternative taxonomy of the group has been proposed including the families Acratocnidae and Parocnidae within a new superfamily, Megalocnoidea.Based on White and MacPhee : and Vinola-Lopez et al. 2022
- Megalocnus
- *†M. rodens Pleistocene to Holocene, Cuba
- Acratocnus
- * †A. odontrigonus Pleistocene, Puerto Rico
- * †A. ye Pleistocene to Holocene, Hispaniola
- * †A. antillensis Pleistocene to Holocene, Cuba
- Mesocnus
- *†Mesocnus browni Pleistocene to Holocene, Cuba
- Parocnus
- *†Parocnus browni Pleistocene to Holocene, Cuba
- * †Parocnus serus Pleistocene to Holocene, Hispaniola
- *†Parocnus dominicanus Pleistocene to Holocene, Hispaniola
- Neocnus
- *†N. gliriformis Pleistocene to Holocene, Cuba
- *†N. major Pleistocene to Holocene, Cuba
- * †N. comes Pleistocene to Holocene, Hispaniola
- * †N. dousman Pleistocene to Holocene, Hispaniola
- * †N. toupiti Pleistocene to Holocene, Hispaniola
- Imagocnus
- *†I. zazae Early Miocene of Cuba