Abstract

Reconstructing the behavior of extinct species is challenging, particularly for those with no living analogues. However, damage preserved as paleopathologies on bone can record how an animal moved in life, potentially reflecting behavioral patterns. Here, we assess hypothesized etiologies of pathology in a pelvis and associated right femur of a Smilodon fatalis saber-toothed cat, one of the best-studied species from the Pleistocene-age Rancho La Brea asphalt seeps, California, USA, using visualization by computed tomography (CT). The pelvis exhibits massive destruction of the right hip socket that was interpreted, for nearly a century, to have developed from trauma and infection. CT imaging reveals instead that the pathological distortions characterize chronic remodeling that began at birth and led to degeneration of the joint over the animal’s life. These results suggest that this individual suffered from hip dysplasia, a congenital condition common in domestic dogs and cats. This individual reached adulthood but could not have hunted properly nor defended territory on its own, likely relying on a social group for feeding and protection. While extant social felids are rare, these fossils and others with similar pathologies are consistent with a spectrum of social strategies in Smilodon supported by a predominance of previous studies.

Highlights

  • Reconstructing the behavior of extinct species is challenging, for those with no living analogues

  • We evaluate the historical inference that this pathology was the result of trauma and assess different etiologies: traumatic arthritis, infective arthritis, or degenerative arthritis

  • The arthritic degeneration visualized in the pathological Smilodon specimens could have arisen from one of three etiologies: traumatic, infective or degenerative arthritis

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Summary

Introduction

Reconstructing the behavior of extinct species is challenging, for those with no living analogues. We assess hypothesized etiologies of pathology in a pelvis and associated right femur of a Smilodon fatalis saber-toothed cat, one of the best-studied species from the Pleistocene-age Rancho La Brea asphalt seeps, California, USA, using visualization by computed tomography (CT). CT imaging reveals instead that the pathological distortions characterize chronic remodeling that began at birth and led to degeneration of the joint over the animal’s life These results suggest that this individual suffered from hip dysplasia, a congenital condition common in domestic dogs and cats. Studies of Smilodon at RLB have enabled reconstruction of its feeding behavior as an ambush predator specializing on herbivorous megafauna, inferred using independent approaches ranging from comparative morphology (e.g.,3) to stable isotopes (e.g.,4). We explore the implications of the diagnosis on reconstructions of social behavior in Smilodon and the potential contribution of paleopathology to a growing interdisciplinary body of literature supporting sociality in this extinct predator

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