Abstract

Collaborative hunting by complex social groups is a hallmark of large dogs (Mammalia: Carnivora: Canidae), whose teeth also tend to be hypercarnivorous, specialized toward increased cutting edges for meat consumption and robust p4-m1 complex for cracking bone. The deep history of canid pack hunting is, however, obscure because behavioral evidence is rarely preserved in fossils. Dated to the Early Pleistocene (>1.2 Ma), Canis chihliensis from the Nihewan Basin of northern China is one of the earliest canines to feature a large body size and hypercarnivorous dentition. We present the first known record of dental infection in C. chihliensis, likely inflicted by processing hard food, such as bone. Another individual also suffered a displaced fracture of its tibia and, despite such an incapacitating injury, survived the trauma to heal. The long period required for healing the compound fracture is consistent with social hunting and family care (food-sharing) although alternative explanations exist. Comparison with abundant paleopathological records of the putatively pack-hunting Late Pleistocene dire wolf, Canis dirus, at the Rancho La Brea asphalt seeps in southern California, U.S.A., suggests similarity in feeding behavior and sociality between Chinese and American Canis across space and time. Pack hunting in Canis may be traced back to the Early Pleistocene, well before the appearance of modern wolves, but additional evidence is needed for confirmation.

Highlights

  • Large, hypercarnivorous dogs—such as gray wolves (Canis lupus), African hunting dogs (Lycaon pictus), and Asian dholes (Cuon alpinus)—are known to be highly social because of their need for collaborative hunting (Van Valkenburgh, 1991)

  • C. chihliensis from SSMZ is dominated by older individuals as inferred from wear on teeth (Chen, 2018; Chen & Tong, 2015)

  • Surveying dire wolf tibiae across all Rancho La Brea deposits, we found 11 specimens (5 left, 6 right) of 251 total pathologic tibiae (4.38%) to have suffered an oblique fracture with foreshortening similar to that in Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology (IVPP) V18139 (Fig. S4)

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Summary

Introduction

Hypercarnivorous dogs (family Canidae)—such as gray wolves (Canis lupus), African hunting dogs (Lycaon pictus), and Asian dholes (Cuon alpinus)—are known to be highly social because of their need for collaborative hunting (Van Valkenburgh, 1991). Energetic requirements necessitate that they pursue prey species that are larger than themselves (Carbone et al, 1999). Unlike their felid (cat family) counterparts, canids lack retractile claws and are usually unable to bring down their prey single-handedly (Wang, Tedford & Antón, 2008), making collaborative (pack) hunting a useful compensatory strategy. Discovery of an injured and healed skeleton and jaws of a large ancestral wolf, Canis chihliensis, from the Early Pleistocene hominin site of Nihewan Basin, northern China, is of interest in inferring their social behavior. Evidence of healing raises the possibility that individuals survived incapacitating injuries by sharing food with family members (Palmqvist, Arribas & Martínez-Navarro, 1999), a question to be explored in this article

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