Mikrotia
Mikrotia is an extinct rodent belonging to the Muridae. It lived during the upper Miocene and its fossil remains have been found in Italy. The type species is M. magna, although two other species are also known.
Description
This animal, despite belonging to the Muridae, was much larger in size than its modern equivalents. The only known skull of the largest species, Mikrotia magna, was about long. The three known species of the genus Mikrotia show an evolutionary tendency towards the development of hypsodontal molars and in the increase of the number of dental lobes in the first lower molar. The oldest specimens of the genus were still characterized by a dental pattern typical of murids, consisting of a succession of three parallel rows of cusps. However, an additional lobe was already present in the anterior part of the lower first molar. In a rather rapid evolutionary succession, various successive species of Mikrotia developed more and more additional lobes and increased hypsodontia. In the last and largest species, M. magna, the first lower molar had acquired a pattern totally similar to that of voles, with six rows of transverse ridges.Classification
Mikrotia is represented by three species, all found in the fissure deposits of Gargano. During the Miocene Gargano became an island and developed insular fauna, including large rodents. Mikrotia developed from unknown continental forms and later its size increased, as did dental specializations.Freudenthal initially described these species in the genus Microtia in 1976, but later the same scholar renamed the genus to Mikrotia in 2006, since the name Microtia was already preoccupied by a butterfly genus named in 1864.
Mikrotia, despite the affinities of the dentition with those of the arvicolines, belongs to the Muridae on the basis of cranial characteristics.