Bossies and Blowholes 333
were widespread in North America and Eurasia through most of the past 50 million years,
although their teeth are adapted for chopping leaves, so they have always been restricted
to the more forested regions. Tapirs, too, have an impressive fossil record of their evolution
(fig. 14.8). The early more primitive forms like Homogalax mentioned earlier (fig. 14.5) can
barely be distinguished from the earliest horses and rhinos. The only clue is that the cross
crests on their molars are slightly more developed (foreshadowing the strong crests on later
tapir teeth), but otherwise their skulls and skeletons look almost identical to the earliest
rhinos and horses. However, through the rest of the Eocene they become more and more
specialized, and more and more like living tapirs. Even by the middle Eocene, their teeth
FIGURE 14.8. Evolution of the tapirs from primitive forms with skulls much like Eocene horses and rhinoceroses,
through progressively more specialized forms that have a deeper retraction of the nasal notch, indicating a
larger proboscis. (Modified from Prothero and Schoch 2002)
Tapirus terrestris Tapirus indicus
Tapirus (Megatapirus)
Miotapirus
“Protapirus”
Lophiodon
Homogalax
Colodon
Isectolophus Lophialetes
Heptodon
Helaletes
LO
HIO
DO
NT
IDA
E
ISECTO-LOPHIDAE
HELA-LETIDAE
LO
PH
IA-
LET
IDA
E D
EPE
RE
TE
L-
LID
AE
RHINOCERO
TOIDEA
EQUOIDEA
TAP
IRID
AE
?
Quaternary
Miocene-Pliocene
Oli
gocene
Eocene
Paleocene