Ground sloth
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Ground sloths were a group of large, extinct sloths that lived in the Americas. They belonged to the mammalian superorder Xenarthra and came in many sizes. Some of the biggest, like Lestodon, Eremotherium, and Megatherium, were about as big as modern-day elephants. Unlike the tree sloths we see today, which climbed in trees, ground sloths lived on the ground and roamed across many landscapes.
These animals first evolved in South America when it was far from other continents. Over time, they spread to places like the Greater Antilles, North America, and even as far north as Alaska. They lived in many different places, from the cold south of Patagonia to the northern reaches of Alaska. After North and South America joined, many ground sloth species moved north as part of the Great American Interchange.
Ground sloths were very numerous during the Late Pleistocene, with over 30 species living across the Americas. However, they went extinct around 12,000 years ago, along with many other large animals. Scientists think this might have been because humans hunted them or because of changes in the climate. Some ground sloths lived much longer on islands in the Caribbean, like Cuba and Hispaniola, surviving until around 1550 BCE.
Description
Ground sloths came in many different sizes. Some were small, while others, like Megatherium, Lestodon, and Eremotherium, were as big as modern elephants. They had strong, barrel-shaped bodies and broad pelvises. Their skulls varied a lot in shape.
These sloths had unique teeth. Unlike most animals, their teeth did not have enamel. They had fewer teeth than other mammals, usually just five in the upper jaw and four in the lower jaw. Their hands had strong claws, and in many ground sloth families, their back feet were turned inward.
Ecology
Ground sloths ate plants. Some ate leaves, and others ate grass. Some may have eaten both. Sloths with longer noses may have had a better sense of smell but worse eyesight and hearing. Some ground sloths might have dug holes to live in. They could not run, so they used other ways to stay safe. They might have been able to stand on two legs to reach plants and use their claws for protection. Some may have been able to climb.
Like living sloths, ground sloths probably had one baby at a time, with several years between each baby. Some ground sloths took care of their young for a long time. One adult sloth was found with two young sloths of different ages, with the oldest being about 3 to 4 years old. Young sloths may have stayed close to their mother after birth, just like living tree sloths.
Evolution
The first clear fossils of ground sloths are from the early Oligocene. By 31 million years ago, they had reached the Caribbean, as shown by a bone found in Puerto Rico. During the Miocene, sloths split into many families. By the Late Miocene, around 10 million years ago, some sloths moved into North America. At the end of the Miocene, the number of ground sloth species fell, but their variety stayed the same during the Pliocene and Pleistocene periods. During these times, more sloths moved into Central and North America as part of the Great American Interchange. Before they went extinct, there were over 30 species of ground sloths in the Americas during the Late Pleistocene.
Families
Paleontologists classify more than 80 genera of ground sloths into several families.
Megalonychidae
Main article: Megalonychidae
The megalonychid ground sloths first appeared in the Late Eocene, about 35 million years ago, in Patagonia. They reached North America before the Isthmus of Panama formed. Some grew bigger over time. Early kinds were small and may have lived partly in trees, but Pliocene kinds were already about half the size of the huge Late Pleistocene Megalonyx jeffersonii, which lived during the last ice age. Some island kinds were as small as large cats, adapting to their island homes.
Megalonyx, meaning "giant claw", lived in North America until after the last (Wisconsin) glaciation. Fossils have been found as far north as Alaska and the Yukon. Excavations in Tarkio Valley, southwestern Iowa, suggest that adult Megalonyx cared for young of different ages.
Megatheriidae
Main article: Megatheriidae
The megatheriid ground sloths are related to megalonychids. They appeared later in the Oligocene, about 30 million years ago, also in South America. This group includes the very large Megatherium and Eremotherium, some of the biggest known ground sloths, weighing as much as 3.5–4 tons. Their strong bones and joints, along with their size and big claws, helped protect them from attackers.
Eremotherium eomigrans arrived in North America 2.2 million years ago, after the Panamanian land bridge formed. It was larger than an African bush elephant, measuring over 6 meters long and standing up to 17 feet tall, and had extra claws on one hand.
Nothrotheriidae
Main article: Nothrotheriidae
Ground sloths in Nothrotheriidae are often grouped with those in Megatheriidae. The most well-known are the South American Thalassocnus, which lived in water, and Nothrotheriops from North America.
The last Nothrotheriops in North America died out recently enough that their subfossil dung can still be found in some caves. One skeleton found in a lava tube at Aden Crater, near Kilbourne Hole, New Mexico, still had skin and hair. This is now at the Yale Peabody Museum.
Mylodontidae
Main article: Mylodontidae
The mylodontid ground sloths, along with their close relatives the scelidotheriids, are the second major group of ground sloths. Early ideas that humans raised young ground sloths in corrals were proven wrong by dating, which showed humans and sloths did not live together at those sites. Scientists have found subfossil remains like fur and skin. The American Museum of Natural History displays a sample of Mylodon dung from Argentina, labeled as being deposited by Theodore Roosevelt. Mylodontids are the only ground sloths known to have had osteoderms in their skin, though not all species had them.
The largest mylodontid was Lestodon, estimated to weigh between 3,400–4,100 kilograms.
Scelidotheriidae
Main article: Scelidotheriidae
The ground sloth family Scelidotheriidae was moved to a subfamily in 1995, but later restored to full family status in 2019 based on genetic data. Along with Mylodontidae and the puzzling Pseudoprepotherium and two-toed sloths, scelidotheriids make up the superfamily Mylodontoidea. Chubutherium is an early member that is not closely related to the main group, which includes Scelidotherium and Catonyx.
Extinction
Ground sloths vanished from what is now the United States around 11,000 years ago. Evidence from Rampart Cave in Arizona shows the Shasta ground sloth lived there until that time. Some scientists think humans may have played a part in their disappearance because these big animals went away after humans arrived.
There are places in the Americas where ground sloths look like they were hunted by humans. In Argentina, a Megatherium was found near a swamp with marks from tools about 12,600 years ago. In Ohio, a Megalonyx skeleton has cuts from tools, dating to around 13,700 years ago. These findings show that early humans may have hunted these large animals.
Ground sloths had some traits that might have made them easier to find. They often fed in open areas where they could be seen, and they had never met humans before. They moved slowly and some weighed as much as 3,000 kilograms (6,600 lb). But they also had thick hides and strong claws to defend themselves.
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