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Hypnomys

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Hypnomys
Temporal range: Early Pliocene–Holocene
H. morpheus
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Rodentia
Family: Gliridae
Subfamily: Leithiinae
Genus: Hypnomys
Bate, 1918
Type species
Hypnomys mahonensis
Bate, 1918
Species
  • H. eliomyoides
  • H. morpheus
  • H. onicensis
  • H. waldreni
  • H. mahonensis

Hypnomys, otherwise known as Balearic giant dormice, is an extinct genus of dormouse (Gliridae) in the subfamily Leithiinae.[1] Its species are considered examples of insular gigantism.[2] They were endemic to the Balearic Islands in the western Mediterranean from the Early Pliocene until their extinction around the 3rd millennium BC. They first appeared in the fossil record on Mallorca during the Early Pliocene (around 5 million years ago), presumably as a result to the evaporation of the Mediterranean sea during the Messinian salinity crisis (5.96-5.33 million years ago) connecting the Balearic Islands with mainland Europe. They later spread to Menorca, and a possible molar is also known from Ibiza.[3] Hypnomys became extinct during the late Holocene (around 4500-4000 years ago) likely shortly after human arrival on the Balearics. They were one of only three native land mammals to the islands at the time of human arrival, alongside the shrew Nesiotites and goat-antelope Myotragus. Their closest living relatives are of the genus Eliomys, including the European garden dormouse (Eliomys quercinus).

History of discovery

[edit]

The first remains of Hypnomys were discovered in 1910 on the island of Mallorca in the Balearic Islands by British palaeontologist Dorothea Bate, with remains also found by Bate on Menorca a year later.[4] Upon first examination, Bate considered the fossils to represent those of Eliomys or Leithia, but in 1918 described the remains into the new genus Hypnomys, describing two species, H. morpheus on Mallorca, and H. mahonensis on Menorca.[5]

Taxonomy and evolutionary history

[edit]

Mitochondrial DNA from H. morpheus indicates that Hypnomys is a member of the subfamily Leithiinae, and closely related to the genus Eliomys, which contains (among others) the European garden dormouse (Eliomys quercinus). The divergence estimated by molecular clock between modern species of Eliomys and Hypnomys in a 2019 study was 13.67 million years ago.[6]

Cladogram of dormice showing the placement of Hypnomys after Bover et al. 2020[6] and Petrova et al. 2024.[7]

Gliridae (dormice)
Graphiurinae

Graphiurus (African dormice)

Glirinae

Glirulus (Japanese dormouse)

Glis (edible dormice)

Leithiinae

Muscardinus (hazel dormouse)

Myomimus (mouse-tailed dormice)

Selevinia (desert dormouse)

Dryomys (woolly and forest dormice)

Eliomys (garden dormice)

Hypnomys (Balearic dormice)

The ancestor of Hypnomys is often assumed to be the prehistoric Eliomys species E. truci, known from the latest Miocene of the Iberian Peninsula.[3] However, the molar complexity of the earliest dormice remains on Mallorca (presumably ancestral to Hypnomys) and the deep divergence between modern Eliomys and Hypnomys has led to suggestions that Hypnomys descended from a now extinct dormouse genus, possibly Vasseuromys or a closely related form.[6]

Hypnomys likely arrived in Mallorca during the Messinian salinity crisis (5.96–5.3 million years ago),[8] an event when the Strait of Gibraltar closed and the Mediterranean evaporated, with the resulting sea level drop causing the exposure of the continental shelf, allowing dispersal from the Iberian Peninsula to the Balearic Islands, before the islands again became isolated following the reopening of the Straits of Gibraltar and the resulting Zanclean flood which refilled the Mediterranean approximately 5.3 million years ago, at the beginning of the Pliocene.[9] Following this, the Balearic Islands were extremely remote, with no examples of terrestrial vertebrates arriving from the mainland in Mallorca and Menorca until human arrival during the late Holocene, allowing evolution to occur in long-term isolation.[10] Although during the Early Pliocene some other mammals like hamsters and murids were present, by the Late Pliocene, Hypnomys represented one of three mammals present in Mallorca, alongside the goat-antelope Myotragus and the shrew Nesiotites. Hypnomys, Myotragus and Nesiotites dispersed from Mallorca to Menorca during the Pliocene-Pleistocene transition as part of a faunal turnover event replacing the fauna of Menorca, which had previously differed from Mallorca (containing species such as the giant rabbit Nuralagus rex), likely due to the islands being connected during episodes of low sea level as a result of Pleistocene glaciation.[9][3] A tooth possibly belonging to Hypnomys is known from the Cova de ca na Reia site on Ibiza (Eivissa), of an uncertain Plio-Pleistocene age; however the assignment to Hypnomys is not definitive.[3]

Species

[edit]

Hypnomys is divided into a number of species, spanning from the Pliocene to the Holocene. These are largely considered to be chronospecies (i.e. to have sequentially evolved from the previous species). As with many extinct mammal species, they are largely distinguished by dental anatomy.[3]

  • Hypnomys waldreni Reumer 1979 (Middle-Late Pliocene, Mallorca)
  • Hypnomys onicensis Reumer 1994 (formerly H. intermedius Reumer, 1981, renamed due to a species of Eliomys with the same name) (Early Pleistocene, Mallorca)
  • Hypnomys eliomyoides Agustí 1980 (Early Pleistocene, Menorca)
  • Hypnomys morpheus Bate 1918 (Middle Pleistocene-Holocene, Mallorca)
  • Hypnomys mahonensis Bate, 1918 (type) (Late Pleistocene-Holocene, Menorca)

Indeterminate remains of Hypnomys not assigned to species extend back to the Early Pliocene on Mallorca.[9]

The species Hypnomys gollcheri de Bruijn, 1966 from the Pleistocene of Malta has been assigned to the separate genus Maltamys.[3]

Although Hypnomys was considered a subgenus of Eliomys by Zammit Maempel and de Bruijn, 1982[11] it has generally been considered distinct by other authors.[3]

The Late Pleistocene-Holocene Menorcan H. mahonesis is distinguished from H. morpheus by its simpler teeth morphology and generally larger body size, although the body size of H. morpheus varied substantially over the course of the glacial cycles, at times reaching sizes typical for H. mahonesis.[3][12]

Description

[edit]
The skull and mandible of H. morpheus (left) compared with the garden dormouse (Eliomys quercinus) including the giant population from Formentera (centre), and normal morphology (right)

The overall body size of Hypnomys is considerably larger than mainland dormice species, with the overall body size of the lineage gradually increasing over time. An articulated specimen of Hypnomys cf. onicensis measured in a 2010 study had a head and body length of around 15 centimetres (5.9 in) and a tail length of around 10 centimetres (3.9 in). A specimen of H. morpheus measured in the same study was found to have a head and body length of about 18 centimetres (7.1 in) and a tail length of about 11.5 centimetres (4.5 in). The tail lengths are proportionally shorter than in species of Eliomys. The specimen of H. morpheus was estimated to weigh between 173 and 284 grams (0.381 and 0.626 lb).[1] In comparison to species of Eliomys, the skull and mandibles of Hypnomys species are substantially more robust. The robustness of the mandibles and zygomatic arches of the skull indicate the presence of well developed masseter muscles.[13] The limbs are also robust, with elongated zygopodiums (part of the limbs between the foot and elbow/knee) on both hind and forelimbs.[1]

Paleobiology

[edit]
Life restoration of H. morpheus

A 2016 bone histology study found that H. onicensis could live over 10 years, an exceptionally long lifespan in comparison to living Eliomys, which can only live up to 5 years. Young juveniles were found to be already substantially larger than equivalently aged Eliomys individuals. Sexual maturity was also likely delayed in comparison to living Eliomys.[14] In a dental microwear study of H. morpheus the high number of fine scratches on the teeth suggests that the species was more omnivorous than the garden dormouse (which is heavily carnivorous), with the presence of pits on the teeth indicating the intake of hard food such as nuts and seeds, or grit,[15] An analysis of the morphology of the lower jaw suggests that was probably efficient at gnawing and chewing.[16] The lifestyle of Hypnomys has been debated. A 2010 study concluded that H. morpheus was more terrestrial than living dormice, based on morphological comparison of the bone proportions.[1] However, a 2014 study disputed this, finding based on the proportions of the limb bones that H. morpheus was likely arboreal, and possibly also had fossorial (digging) capabilities.[17] Analysis of the cribriform plate of a probable specimen of H. morpheus suggests that the species probably had a well developed senses of sight, hearing and smell, the last possibly better developed than the living garden dormice. The former two have been suggested to have been for detecting predators, while the last aided in finding food.[18] While the Balearic Islands lacked large terrestrial predators, Hypnomys was hunted by birds of prey such as owls which are known to have inhabited the islands.[17]

Extinction

[edit]

Like the two other endemic mammal genera on the Balearic islands, the shrew Nesiotites and the goat-antelope Myotragus, Hypnomys likely rapidly became extinct after human arrival in the Balearic islands during the mid-late 3rd millennium BC. The youngest current radiocarbon dates for H. morpheus are a few thousand years prior to human arrival, but later dates much closer to human arrival for Nesiotites and Myotragus suggest that it was also present at the time of arrival.[10] Direct predation by humans is an unlikely cause of extinction for Hypnomys. Predators currently present on the Balearic Islands such as cats, weasels, martins and genets were introduced to the islands long after the extinction of the endemic mammals, and there is no compelling evidence for the early presence of dogs. The garden dormouse (Eliomys quercinus) and wood mouse (Apodemus sylvaticus) were early introductions to the islands and may have competed with Hypnomys, though there is no concrete evidence that their existences overlapped. Diseases spread by introduced species may have contributed to the extinction.[19] The two other native pre-human terrestrial vertebrates of Mallorca and Menorca, the still living Lilford's wall lizard (Podarcis lilfordi) and Majorcan midwife toad (Alytes muletensis) have been heavily impacted by human presence on the archipelago, and today are only confined to remote areas.[20]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Hypnomys is an extinct genus of giant dormice in the family Gliridae and subfamily Leithiinae, endemic to the Balearic Islands (Mallorca and Menorca) in the western Mediterranean, where it evolved in isolation following a single colonization event during the Messinian salinity crisis approximately 5.35 million years ago.[1] These rodents, derived from an ancestor similar to the extant garden dormouse Eliomys quercinus, exhibited insular gigantism, with body masses ranging from 173 to 284 grams—substantially larger than their closest living relatives—and featured robust builds with elongated limbs suggesting enhanced terrestrial and possibly fossorial locomotion.[1][2] The genus comprises at least eight chronospecies across the two islands, including H. mahonensis from the Neogene of Menorca, H. onicensis from the Late Pliocene, and H. morpheus from the Late Pleistocene to Early Holocene of Mallorca, reflecting progressive evolutionary adaptations such as increased body size and extended lifespans exceeding 10 years in some species.[3][2] Bone histology and mandibular morphology indicate dietary shifts toward harder foods, with dental microwear patterns showing greater emphasis on terrestrial foraging compared to arboreal habits in mainland glirids.[1][4] Fossil evidence from caves and deposits reveals that Hypnomys survived into the Holocene but underwent extinction around 4,000–5,000 years ago, coinciding with the arrival of modern humans on the islands, which likely introduced predation, habitat alteration, and competition that disrupted their isolated ecosystems.[1] Ancient DNA analyses confirm a deep divergence from Eliomys around 13.67 million years ago, underscoring the genus's long independent evolutionary history amid the broader pattern of human-mediated extinctions affecting insular giants and dwarfs.[5]

History of Discovery

Initial Discoveries

The first fossils attributed to the genus Hypnomys were discovered in 1910 during the second exploratory visit to Mallorca by British naturalist and palaeontologist Dorothea M. A. Bate, who collected a few rodent remains from ossiferous cave deposits while searching for extinct fauna in the Balearic Islands. These initial finds consisted of fragmentary skeletal elements, including limb bones and dental material, recovered from limestone cave contexts associated with other endemic Pleistocene mammals such as Myotragus balearicus. Bate's excavations targeted coastal and inland karstic sites, where breccias rich in fossil vertebrates had accumulated, marking the beginning of systematic palaeontological work on the islands' insular rodent diversity. The following year, in 1911, Bate extended her fieldwork to Menorca, where she obtained additional rodent fossils from fissures within Miocene limestone outcrops, yielding more substantial material such as incomplete skulls, mandibles, and teeth from Pleistocene deposits. These Menorcan remains, larger in size than those from Mallorca, represented early evidence of geographic variation within the genus and were collected from coastal karstic sites, including the type locality at Punta Esquitxador near Ciutadella, which produced partial skeletons alongside other insular taxa like the giant tortoise Testudo gymnesica. The discoveries highlighted the role of cave and fissure systems as natural traps preserving the islands' unique fossil assemblages.[6] In 1918, Bate formally described Hypnomys as a new genus of extinct muscardine rodent (Gliridae) in a seminal publication, based primarily on the dental and cranial morphology of the collected specimens, which featured a robust skull with a wide interorbital region, low-crowned molariform teeth with transverse ridges, and fused tibia-fibula elements indicative of an arboreal or scansorial lifestyle. She distinguished two species from the initial material: the smaller H. morpheus from Mallorcan cave deposits and the larger H. mahonensis from Menorcan fissures, establishing the genus as an endemic giant dormouse adapted to insular conditions. These foundational descriptions, drawn from partial skeletons and isolated elements, laid the groundwork for later taxonomic revisions, though the initial classification within Gliridae has endured.

Subsequent Research

Following the initial discoveries in the early 20th century, excavations in the 1950s through 1970s, led by archaeologist William H. Waldren, significantly expanded the fossil record of Hypnomys at sites such as Son Muleta Cave on Mallorca.[7] These efforts uncovered abundant Holocene remains, including dental and postcranial elements, which demonstrated the persistence of the genus into recent prehistoric times and provided material for taxonomic revisions.[7] The Son Muleta assemblages, in particular, yielded specimens that highlighted morphological variation within the genus, contributing to the description of H. waldreni as a distinct species in 1979 by Jelle W. F. Reumer, based on early Pliocene to Pleistocene material from Cap de Farrutx and other Mallorcan localities.[8] From the 1980s to the 2000s, multidisciplinary approaches, including radiocarbon dating and systematic sieving techniques, further refined the chronology and taphonomy of Hypnomys fossils across the Balearic Islands.[9] Radiocarbon analyses of bones from multiple cave sites on Mallorca confirmed the late survival of H. morpheus into the late Holocene, with dates clustering around 5,000–4,000 years before present, indicating coexistence with early human colonizers shortly before extinction.[9] Notably, excavations at Cova de Binigaus V on Menorca during this period revealed articulated skeletons of Hypnomys eliomyoides, preserving associated postcranial elements that offered insights into locomotor adaptations and depositional contexts in Lower Pleistocene layers.[10] A pivotal advancement came in 2010 with the study by Pere Bover and colleagues, which utilized associated skeletons from Cova des Pas de Vallgornera on Mallorca to reconstruct the body shape of H. morpheus.[11] By comparing limb bone indices and discriminant function analyses with extant dormice like Eliomys quercinus, the research established Hypnomys as more terrestrial and potentially semi-fossorial, marking the first complete skeletal reconstructions and challenging prior arboreal interpretations.[11] These findings integrated morphometric data from over 200 postcranial elements, emphasizing the genus's island-specific evolutionary trajectory. In 2019, the extraction of ancient DNA from a H. morpheus specimen from Menorca represented a breakthrough in molecular paleontology for the genus.[5] Using mitochondrial genome sequencing from a petrous bone, Bover et al. generated the first genetic data for Hypnomys, enabling molecular clock estimates that dated the divergence from mainland dormice to approximately 13.7 million years ago and clarified phylogenetic affinities within Gliridae.[5] This work not only validated fossil-based chronologies but also highlighted the potential of aDNA for resolving insular endemism in micromammals.

Taxonomy

Classification

Hypnomys is an extinct genus within the family Gliridae, the dormice, and is placed in the subfamily Leithiinae.[12] This classification reflects its position among other insular giant dormice, such as Leithia, with evolutionary ties to mainland forms.[13] The genus was initially described by Dorothea Bate in 1918 based on fossils from the Balearic Islands, where she related it closely to the extant garden dormouse Eliomys quercinus.[14] Bate noted its robust dental morphology, characterized by massive mandibles and molars adapted for grinding hard vegetable matter, as evidenced by microwear patterns showing high numbers of fine scratches and pits indicative of an abrasive, omnivorous diet.[15] Hypnomys is distinguished from other Gliridae by its enlarged body size and insular adaptations, such as enhanced terrestrial and fossorial capabilities. It has no living relatives, with the closest extant analog being Eliomys quercinus.[2] Recent studies recognize ongoing taxonomic debates regarding species boundaries, often treated as chronospecies in an anagenetic lineage.[16]

Species

The genus Hypnomys encompasses eight recognized chronospecies, all endemic to the Balearic Islands and representing an anagenetic lineage that evolved in isolation following a late Miocene colonization event. These chronospecies exhibit temporal progression from the Pliocene to the Holocene, with distinct geographic distributions primarily between Mallorca and Menorca (four per island), and varying body sizes reflecting insular gigantism relative to mainland Gliridae. Named species include the following, with additional provisional forms (e.g., Hypnomys sp. from Early Pliocene deposits). The type species, H. morpheus Bate, 1918, is known from the Late Pleistocene to Holocene deposits of Mallorca, where it persisted until approximately 4,000–5,000 years ago. As the largest member of the genus, it attained a head and body length of about 18 cm and an estimated body mass of 173–284 g, based on allometric scaling from skeletal measurements.[11] This species is characterized by robust dental and mandibular morphology adapted to an abrasive diet including hard vegetable matter, with remains commonly recovered from cave sites such as Cova de sa Bassa Blanca. H. mahonensis Bate, 1918, represents a Pleistocene species restricted to Menorca, primarily documented from late Pleistocene cave deposits like those at Punta Esquitxador. It exhibits a smaller overall build compared to H. morpheus, with simpler dental patterns featuring isolated ridges on upper molars, and is interpreted as a descendant lineage potentially derived from Mallorcan populations.[17] Recent analyses suggest ongoing debate regarding its status, with some revisions proposing it as a junior synonym or variant of H. morpheus based on shared dental traits and biogeographic connections.[17] The earliest species, H. waldreni Reumer, 1979, occurs in late Pliocene sediments from Mallorca, such as the Cap de Ferrutx locality, and displays transitional morphology bridging mainland Eliomys ancestors and later Hypnomys forms, including moderately enlarged cheek teeth. Two Middle Pleistocene species bridge the early and late phases of the genus: H. onicensis Reumer, 1994, from Early to Middle Pleistocene sites on Mallorca (e.g., Pedrera de s’Ònix), noted for its intermediate size (approximately 200 g body mass) and evidence of exceptional longevity exceeding 10 years, inferred from skeletochronology of limb bones indicating slowed growth rates.[2] Meanwhile, H. eliomyoides Agustí, 1980, is a Middle Pleistocene form from Menorca, recognized as an endemic lineage with distinct allometric limb proportions suggesting specialized locomotion, and dental features aligning it closely with but separate from H. mahonensis.[17][10]

Evolutionary History

Origins and Divergence

The genus Hypnomys originated through a single colonization event on the island of Mallorca from mainland Europe during the Messinian stage (approximately 5.96–5.33 million years ago), with its ancestor closely related to the dormouse Eliomys quercinus.[18] This dispersal is presumed to have occurred via rafting, as small mammals like dormice could cross water barriers on floating vegetation during periods of environmental instability in the Mediterranean. The Messinian Salinity Crisis, marked by the near-desiccation of the Mediterranean basin, created conditions for such overwater colonization but ended with the basin's rapid refilling around 5.33 million years ago, which isolated the Balearic archipelago and initiated the endemic radiation of Hypnomys.[18] This isolation post-crisis allowed the genus to evolve without competition from mainland predators or similar competitors, setting the stage for its diversification across the Gymnesic Islands (Mallorca and Menorca). The earliest fossils attributed to Hypnomys come from Early Pliocene deposits (~5 million years ago) on Mallorca, including small-bodied indeterminate forms (Hypnomys sp.) representing the initial stages of insular adaptation shortly after colonization. The genus maintained a continuous fossil record through the Pliocene, Pleistocene, and into the late Holocene, with remains documented up to approximately 4500 years ago, reflecting long-term persistence in isolation. A clear chronospecies progression characterizes the evolution of Hypnomys, transitioning from the small-bodied Pliocene forms to progressively larger forms like the Late Pliocene H. onicensis and the giant Holocene H. morpheus (body mass up to ~250 g), driven by island gigantism in the absence of predators and limited resources. This size increase exemplifies the adaptive responses to insular conditions following the post-Messinian isolation.[18]

Phylogenetic Relationships

Phylogenetic analyses of Hypnomys have primarily relied on both morphological and molecular data to establish its position within the family Gliridae, particularly in the subfamily Leithiinae. Morphological studies, focusing on cranial and dental features, indicate that Hypnomys forms a sister group to the extant genus Eliomys, sharing traits such as pronounced dental crenulations and increased cranial robusticity. These similarities suggest a close evolutionary relationship, with Hypnomys representing a derived insular lineage adapted to the Balearic Islands environment.[19] Cladistic analyses based on fossil morphology further support Hypnomys as a distinct, endemic branch within Gliridae, lacking close relatives among other Balearic endemic mammals, which belong to unrelated lineages such as Soricidae and Bovidae. This isolation underscores its evolution as an independent insular radiation following divergence from mainland forms.[19] Molecular evidence from ancient DNA reinforces these morphological inferences. A study sequencing mitochondrial DNA from Hypnomys morpheus confirmed its placement within Leithiinae and estimated the divergence from Eliomys at approximately 13.67 million years ago (95% highest posterior density interval: 7.39–20.52 Ma), aligning with Miocene dispersal events. This genetic analysis also ruled out hybridization with mainland dormice populations, as the mitochondrial genome showed no evidence of introgression and formed a monophyletic clade sister to Eliomys.[5] An integrated revision combining fossil records and DNA data has solidified Hypnomys as a fully distinct genus, rejecting earlier hypotheses of it being a subgenus of Eliomys and emphasizing its unique biogeographic history as an insular endemic.[5]

Description

Physical Characteristics

Hypnomys species displayed a range of body sizes consistent with insular gigantism relative to mainland dormice, with head-body lengths varying from approximately 15 cm in smaller forms like H. cf. onicensis to 17.9 cm in H. morpheus, accompanied by tail lengths of 9.7–11.6 cm.[1] Body weights across species and individuals are estimated at 150–300 g, with H. morpheus specimens ranging from 173–284 g based on skeletal reconstructions from associated fossils.[1] These measurements derive from complete and partial skeletons recovered from Pleistocene deposits in the Balearic Islands, such as the Cova des Pas de Vallgornera on Mallorca.[1] The cranium of Hypnomys was robust, featuring an elongated rostrum and strong zygomatic arches that supported powerful masseter muscles, as evidenced by the wide zygomatic plate and small infraorbital foramen in fossil skulls.[15] The braincase was narrower and less inflated in the parietal region compared to the mainland relative Eliomys quercinus, with a skull length of about 46 mm in H. morpheus.[1][13] The mandible exhibited greater massiveness, including a high and large ascending ramus with robust coronoid and condylar processes, differing markedly from the slimmer structure in Eliomys.[15] Molars displayed elongated upper tooth rows and complex occlusal surfaces with high numbers of fine scratches and pits, indicative of processing tough, abrasive vegetation.[1][15] The postcranial skeleton featured elongated limbs adapted to the species' increased mass, including a sturdy humerus and femur with wider distal ends, as well as lengthened radius, ulna, and tibia relative to skull size.[1] Fossil partial skeletons, such as those from Mallorca, show no evidence of specialized claws, aligning with the generalized phalangeal morphology typical of glirids.[1] Across species like H. morpheus and H. onicensis, postcranial proportions varied slightly, with H. morpheus exhibiting more pronounced elongation in the zygopodium bones.[1]

Adaptations

Hypnomys exhibited insular gigantism, a common evolutionary response in island-dwelling mammals to reduced predation pressure and altered resource competition. Compared to its mainland relative Eliomys quercinus, which averages around 74 g in body mass, Hypnomys species achieved sizes of 173–284 g for H. morpheus and approximately 200 g for H. onicensis, representing roughly 2–3 times the mass of the ancestor.[20][18] This size increase is attributed not to accelerated growth rates but to prolonged growth periods and extended lifespans, allowing individuals to reach larger adult sizes in environments with abundant but seasonal resources and low interspecific competition.[18] Morphological changes in the limbs reflect adaptations to terrestrial foraging on the Balearic Islands, diverging from the more arboreal lifestyle of mainland glirids. A study of associated skeletons revealed elongated zygopodium bones, particularly in the hindlimbs (tibia), along with wider distal ends of the humerus and femur, indicating cursorial traits suited for ground-level movement and potentially fossorial activities.[20] These robust limb structures facilitated efficient navigation of island terrains for foraging, contrasting with the shorter, more generalized limbs of Eliomys quercinus.[20] Dental morphology in Hypnomys evolved to handle tougher, more abrasive foods available in insular settings, such as hard seeds and nuts, which were absent or less prevalent in mainland diets. The upper tooth row is slightly elongated with larger molars featuring increased crown heights and flat occlusal planes, enabling better processing of gritty vegetation.[20][21] Microwear patterns and a robust mandible with enhanced masseteric musculature further support a diet requiring greater bite force, marking a divergence from the folivorous tendencies of smaller relatives.

Paleobiology

Locomotion and Lifestyle

Analysis of associated skeletons from cave deposits on Mallorca reveals that Hypnomys species exhibited a semi-terrestrial lifestyle, with elongated zygopodium bones (radius, ulna, and tibia) and robust postcranial elements indicating enhanced terrestrial locomotion compared to its mainland relative Eliomys quercinus. These features, including wider distal humerus and femur, suggest capabilities for digging and burrowing, though with limited cursorial ability relative to more terrestrial rodents. Factorial discriminant analysis of skeletal indexes (e.g., brachial and crural indices) classified Hypnomys as primarily arboreal (74.6% probability) but with notable semifossorial traits (22% probability), implying capabilities for digging and burrowing in soft substrates.[20] Subsequent allometric studies of limb long bones confirm that Hypnomys retained proportions similar to E. quercinus, supporting arboreal adaptations like jumping and gliding alongside increased walking and digging proficiency, rather than extreme terrestriality.[22] Robust feet and overall bone robustness further point to a lifestyle involving ground-level foraging and shelter construction in insular woodlands with low predator pressure. Cave sites, such as Cova des Pas de Vallgornera, yielded multiple articulated skeletons, suggesting that Hypnomys individuals may have nested or sought refugia in groups, consistent with semifossorial habits. Skeletochronology from femoral bone histology indicates that H. onicensis individuals achieved exceptional longevity, with the oldest specimens showing over 10 lines of arrested growth (LAGs), far exceeding the maximum of 6 LAGs in E. quercinus.[18] This prolonged lifespan, coupled with slow growth rates, reflects a low-predation environment fostering a cautious, slow-paced life history.[18] Activity patterns were likely nocturnal or crepuscular, mirroring those of E. quercinus, which exhibits peak activity at night and during twilight to avoid diurnal threats, an adaptation well-suited to predator-scarce islands.[23]

Diet and Sensory Capabilities

Hypnomys exhibited an omnivorous diet, as evidenced by dental microwear analysis of molar facets, which revealed a combination of fine scratches indicative of graminoids and soft plant material, alongside pits suggesting consumption of hard items such as nuts and seeds, as well as softer fruits and possibly insects.[15] This pattern of microwear, with higher variability than in its mainland relative Eliomys quercinus, points to seasonal dietary shifts and adaptation to a broad range of available resources in the resource-poor island environment.[15] Such omnivory aligns with the generalist feeding habits observed across the Gliridae family, where dormice typically incorporate plant matter, fruits, and invertebrates. The foraging strategy of Hypnomys emphasized ground-level herbivory within the Mediterranean maquis shrublands of the Balearic Islands, supported by robust cranial and mandibular features suited to processing abrasive vegetation and grit-laden foods.[15] The massive mandible and elongated tooth row facilitated handling tough, terrestrial plant resources, reflecting enhanced terrestrial and fossorial foraging capabilities compared to E. quercinus, while the overall lifestyle remained primarily arboreal as indicated by postcranial analyses.[20][22] Sensory adaptations in Hypnomys included well-developed visual and auditory capabilities, likely aiding in predator detection from avian threats in the absence of terrestrial carnivores.[24] Large orbital regions suggest enhanced low-light vision suitable for crepuscular or nocturnal activity in dense maquis habitats.[24] Auditory acuity was supported by proportionally wider tympanic bullae relative to skull length, enabling acute hearing for environmental cues.[20] Additionally, an enlarged cribriform plate indicates advanced olfactory capabilities, which would have facilitated the detection of scattered or buried food items, enhancing opportunistic foraging efficiency.[24]

Extinction

Timeline

Hypnomys species endured through the Pleistocene epoch and persisted into the late Holocene on the Balearic Islands, representing a continuous presence in the region's insular ecosystems. On Mallorca, the species H. morpheus survived until approximately 4500–3500 years ago, marking the final phase of its existence before complete extirpation.[25] Radiocarbon dating provides the most precise chronological evidence for this terminal survival period. The latest dated specimens indicate overlap with human colonization of the islands around 5600 years ago (or earlier, per recent evidence).[26] Regional variations in extinction timing between the Gymnesic Islands are not well-established, with Hypnomys populations disappearing around 4000–5000 years ago across both Mallorca and Menorca. No records indicate survival of Hypnomys into historical periods, as archaeological assemblages from the Roman era onward on both Mallorca and Menorca lack any trace of the genus, confirming its definitive absence by the mid-Holocene.[27]

Causes

The extinction of Hypnomys was driven primarily by anthropogenic factors associated with the arrival of Neolithic settlers in the Balearic Islands during the 3rd millennium BC. These early humans introduced domestic goats (Capra hircus), which overgrazed native vegetation and contributed to widespread habitat degradation through browsing and trampling, severely impacting the shrubby maquis woodlands that served as key foraging habitats for the giant dormouse.[28] Deforestation for agriculture further reduced these ecosystems, limiting food availability and shelter for Hypnomys populations already vulnerable due to their insular adaptations.[9] Introduced species exacerbated these pressures through direct competition and predation. Neolithic and subsequent settlers brought rodents such as Rattus spp., which competed for resources and preyed on juveniles, while feral cats (Felis catus)—likely introduced for pest control—targeted Hypnomys as a novel food source, accelerating population declines. Pathogens carried by mainland species may have also played a role, introducing diseases to which the isolated Hypnomys had no immunity. Paleoenvironmental evidence indicates that Holocene climatic conditions in the western Mediterranean were relatively stable during this period, with no significant fluctuations that could independently account for the extinction; instead, these data underscore the dominance of human-induced changes over natural factors.[9]

References

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