Abstract

Carolocoutoia ferigoloi is one of the largest metatherians of the Itaboraí fauna (Early Eocene, Southeastern Brazil). It was originally identified from a single upper molar with a markedly bunodont crown, wrinkled enamel, and a robust protocone. Here, we describe a nearly complete right dentary of C. ferigoloi with the alveoli of the premolars and first lower molar, a very worn second lower molar, complete third and fourth lower molars, and a right second upper molar. Carolocoutoia differs from other protodidelphids in having inflated, conical trigonid cusps, a more flattened entoconid, a developed entocristid, and a supernumerary cusp labial to the entoconid. Carolocoutoia was recovered in our phylogenetic analysis as the sister taxon of Protodidelphis ), since both share the presence of an anteriorly recurved dentary, wrinkled enamel, and a sinuous crest between stylar cusps B and D. The inflated, conical trigonid cusps of Carolocoutoia represent an evolutionary convergence with other South American Paleogene mammals, such as some ungulates, and the polydolopimorphian Roberthoffstetteria. We also present the second record of a pathology (molar extrusion) in a metatherian from Itaboraí. Based on its molar crown morphology, Carolocoutoia ferigoloi was a specialized frugivorous metatherian. The occurrence of a specialized frugivorous protodidelphid in the Itaboraí fauna is in line with the well-established increase in global temperatures and the expansion of tropical forests after the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (around 55.5–55.3 million years ago).

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