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A new genus of badger from Pikermi (Greece) and a review of the systematics and evolution of Miocene Melinae (Mammalia, Carnivora, Mustelidae)

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Kargopoulos, N., Valenciano, A., Jiangzuo, Q., Liakopoulou, D., Gerakakis, N., Kampouridis, P., Paparizos, N., Svorligkou, G., Filis, P., Sklavounou, S., & Roussiakis, S. (2026). A new genus of badger from Pikermi (Greece) and a review of the systematics and evolution of Miocene Melinae (Mammalia, carnivora, mustelidae). Journal of Systematic Palaeontology, 24(1), 2647483. https://doi.org/10.1080/14772019.2026.2647483

Abstract

The evolution of Mustelidae has been a topic of debate, obscured by a complex system of convergences between phylogenetically distant groups. In this work, we present a new genus and species of mustelid, Archaeomeles neglecta gen. et sp. nov., from the classical Turolian locality of Pikermi (Greece, Late Miocene, MN12). The material consists of a skull with the associated mandible and shows distinct features that clearly differentiate it from all other known mustelid genera. These characteristics include a long and narrow rostrum, the absence of developed sagittal and supraorbital crest, relatively slender mandibular corpus, enamel folds on the lower canines, the wide P3 and p4, and the moderately enlarged M1 talon and m1 talonid. Morphometrical comparisons and phylogenetic analysis suggest that Archaeomeles is a stem member of the Melinae along with the other Turolian mustelids Promeles, Polgardia and Melodon from Eurasia. Ecomorphological comparisons indicate intermediate dietary habits between the plesiomorphic gulonines and the derived extant badgers, suggesting a diet that is based on small vertebrates and invertebrates as well as plant material.

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