Abstract
Hippo-like rhinocerotids, or teleoceratines, were a conspicuous component of Holarctic Miocene mammalian faunas, but their phylogenetic relationships are widely under-investigated. Excavations in lower Miocene deposits of the Olkhon Island (Tagay locality, Eastern Siberia; 16–18 Ma) have opened a unique window on the poorly-known early history of the Lake Baikal ecosystems, notably in unearthing a skeleton of the teleoceratine Brachydiceratherium shanwangense (Wang, 1965). The concerned remains provide new insights into craniomandibular, dental, and postcranial morpho-anatomy of this elusive species. Comparison to most teleoceratine species described in Eurasia allows for proposing phylogenetic relationships among Teleoceratina through a formal parsimony analysis. Diaceratherium Dietrich, 1931, as a monotypic genus (earliest Miocene, Western Europe), is retrieved as the earliest teleoceratine offshoot. Other genera are both plurispecific and monophyletic, with Prosantorhinus Heissig, 1974 (early Miocene, Eurasia) and Teleoceras Hatcher, 1894 (Miocene, North America) forming the sister clade of the (Brachypotherium Roger, 1904 (Miocene, Old World) plus Brachydiceratherium Lavocat, 1951) clade. The latter genus includes eight species spanning the late Oligocene–late Miocene interval in Europe and Asia. All teleoceratine genera but Diaceratherium span considerable geographical and stratigraphical ranges, likely related to their ultra-generalist ecological preferences.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
Figures 1, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13 were added and changed in the manuscript. Measurement tables were added and supplemental files were updated. Fixed remarks in some sections.