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Hoy te traemos un nuevo video de "10 cosas que quizá no sabías de...". Y en esta ocasión, toca hablar del más icónico de todos los carnívoros de la Era de Hielo, del carismático Smilodon; conocido también como tigre dientes de sable. ¿Cuál era su dieta? ¿Se llevaba bien con otros miembros de su especie? ¿Era social o solitario? ¿Tenía cachetes de bulldog? Eso y más en este video. No te lo puedes perder. _______________________________________________________________________________ Patreon: www.patreon.com/Palaeos Facebook: www.facebook.com/PalaeosPag Instagram: www.instagram.com/palaeoshvt/ Contacto oficial: [email protected] Donación única: https://paypal.me/Palaeos _______________________________________________________________________________ Fuentes principales: Antón, M. 2013. Sabertooth. Indiana University Press. 243p. Antón, M., García-Perea, R. y Turner, A. 1998. Reconstructed facial appearance of the sabretoothed felid Smilodon. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 124(4), 369-386. Binder, W. J. y Van Valkenburgh, B. 2010. A comparison of tooth wear and breakage in Rancho La Brea sabertooth cats and dire wolves across time. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 30(1), 255-261. Bovard, J. F. 1907. Notes on Quaternary Felidae from California. University of California Publications, Bulletin of the Department of Geology 5:155–170. Chimento, N. R. et al. 2019. Evidence of intraspecific agonistic interactions in Smilodon populator (Carnivora, Felidae). Comptes Rendus Palevol, 18(4), 449-454. Coltrain, J. B. et al. 2004. Rancho La Brea stable isotope biogeochemistry and its implications for the palaeoecology of late Pleistocene, coastal southern California. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 205(3-4), 199-219. Cope, E. D. 1880. On the extinct cats of North America. American Naturalist 14:833–858. Fariña, R. A. et al. 2013. Megafauna: giant beasts of pleistocene South America. Indiana University Press. Gervais, H. y F. Ameghino. 1880. Los mamíferos fósiles de la América del Sud. Gillette, D. D. y Ray, C. E. 1981. Glyptodonts of North America. Smithsonian Contributions to Paleobiology 40:1–255. Groves, C. P. y Grubb, P. 1990. Muntiacidae. In Horns, pronghorns, and antlers (pp. 134-168). Springer, New York, NY. Leidy, J. 1869. The extinct mammalian fauna of Dakota and Nebraska, including an account of some allied forms from other localities, together with a synopsis of the mammalian remains of North America. Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 2nd ser. 7:8–472. Leidy, J. 1889. The saber-tooth tiger of Florida. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 41:29–31. Lund, P. W. 1842. Blik paa Brasiliens Dyreverden för sidste jordomvæltning. Fjerde afhandling: Fortsættelse af pattedyrene. Det Kongelige Danske videnskabernes selskabs naturvidenskabelige og mathematiske afhandlinger 9:137–208. Manzuetti, A. et al. 2018. First record of Smilodon fatalis Leidy, 1868 (Felidae, Machairodontinae) in the extra-Andean region of South America (late Pleistocene, Sopas Formation), Uruguay: taxonomic and paleobiogeographic implications. Quaternary Science Reviews, 180, 57-62. Matthew, W. D. 1918. Contributions to the Snake Creek fauna; with Notes upon the Pleistocene of western Nebraska, American Museum Expedition of 1916. Bulletin of the AMNH. 38(7): 183-229. McCall, S. et al. 2003. Assessing behavior in extinct animals: Was Smilodon social?. Brain, Behavior and Evolution, 61(3), 159-164. McHenry, C. R. et al. 2007. Supermodeled sabercat, predatory behavior in Smilodon fatalis revealed by high-resolution 3D computer simulation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 104(41), 16010-16015. Miller, G. J. 1969. A new hypothesis to explain the method of food ingestion used by Smilodon californicus Bovard. Tebiwa, 12(1), 9-19. Reynolds, A. R. et al. 2021. Smilodon fatalis siblings reveal life history in a saber-toothed cat. Iscience, 24(1), 101916. Rincón, A. D. et al. 2011. New saber-toothed cat records (Felidae: Machairodontinae) for the Pleistocene of Venezuela, and the Great American Biotic Interchange. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 31(2), 468-478. Turner, A. et al. 2011. Changing ideas about the evolution and functional morphology of Machairodontine felids. Estudios Geológicos, 67(2), 255-276. Wallace, S. C. y Hulbert Jr, R. C. 2013. A new machairodont from the Palmetto Fauna (Early Pliocene) of Florida, with comments on the origin of the Smilodontini (Mammalia, Carnivora, Felidae). PLoS one, 8(3), e56173. Webb, S. D. 1974. The Status of Smilodon in the Florida Pleistocene; pp.149–153 En: S. D. Webb (ed.), Pleistocene Mammals of Florida. University Presses of Florida, Gainesville, Florida. Werdelin, L. et al. 2018. Smilodon. The iconic sabertooth. Johns Hopkins University Press. Baltimore. 212p.