- Pachycrocuta
Taxobox
name = "Pachycrocuta"
status = fossil
fossil_range =Middle Pliocene toMiddle Pleistocene
regnum =Animal ia
phylum =Chordata
classis =Mammal ia
ordo =Carnivora
familia =Hyaenidae
genus = "†Pachycrocuta"
subdivision_ranks = Species
subdivision = "see text""Pachycrocuta" was a
genus of prehistorichyena s. The largest and most well-researchedspecies was the giant hyaena "Pachycrocuta brevirostris", which stood about convert|100|cm|in|abbr=on|lk=on at the shoulder and may have weighed more than convert|113|kg|lb|abbr=on [Alan Turner: "Prehistoric Mammals". National Geographic, Firecrest Books Ltd. 2004.] — the size of a small lioness. This would make it the largest hyena to have ever lived. It lived between theMiddle Pliocene and theMiddle Pleistocene , about 3 million to 500.000 years ago.Fossil remains have been found in many localities ofEurasia and southern and easternAfrica . Most material consists of fragmented remains, usually of the skull, but there has been a cache of very comprehensive bone material unearthed at the famousZhoukoudian locallity which probably represents the remains of animals which used these caves as lairs for many millennia [cite journal |last=Turner |first=Alan |authorlink= |coauthors=Antón, Mauricio |year=1996 |month= |title=The giant hyaena "Pachycrocuta brevirostris" (Mammalia, Carnivora, Hyaenidae) |journal=Geobios |volume=29 |issue=4 |pages=455-468 |doi=10.1016/S0016-6995(96)80005-2 |url= |accessdate= |quote= ] .It probably was a small-pack hunter of large animals (up to
deer size and occasionally larger) and also scavenged for food. Possibly it preferentially did the latter because was a very heavyset animal not built for chasing prey over long distances. In this aspect it would have differed from theSpotted Hyena of today, which is a more nimble animal that, contrary to its image as a scavenger, usually kills its own food but often gets displaced bylion s. Apparently it was ecologically close enough to the smaller (but still large) relative "Pliocrocuta perrieri"; they are never found as contemporary fossils in the same region.Other proposed species, "P. robusta" and "P. pyrenaica", are less well researched; the former may simply be an exceptionally large European
paleosubspecies of the Brown Hyena. Sometimes included in this genus (as "Pachycrocuta bellax") is the extinct giant striped hyaena, "Hyaena bellax".References
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