Leptictidium

Leptictidium
Temporal range: Early to Late Eocene,
Fossil L. auderiense skeleton, Muséum national d'histoire naturelle
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Leptictida
Family: Pseudorhyncocyonidae
Genus: Leptictidium
Tobien, 1962
Type species
Leptictidium auderiense
Tobien, 1962
Species
  • L. auderiense Tobien, 1962
  • L. nasutum Lister & Storch, 1985
  • L. tobieni Koenigswald & Storch, 1987
  • L. ginsburgi Mathis, 1989
  • L. sigei Mathis, 1989
  • L. listeri Hooker, 2013
  • L. prouti Hooker, 2013
  • L. storchi Hooker, 2013

Leptictidium is an extinct genus of small mammals that were likely bipedal. Comprising eight species, they resembled today's bilbies, bandicoots, and elephant shrews, and occupied a similar niche. They are especially interesting for their combination of characteristics typical of primitive eutherians with highly specialized adaptations, such as powerful hind legs and a long tail which aided in locomotion. They were omnivorous, their diet a combination of insects, lizards, frogs, and small mammals. Leptictidium and other leptictids are not placentals, but are non-placental eutherians, although they are closely related to placental eutherians. They appeared in the Lower Eocene, a time of warm temperatures and high humidity, roughly fifty million years ago. Although they were widespread throughout Europe, they became extinct around thirty-five million years ago with no descendants, as they were adapted to live in forest ecosystems and were unable to adapt to the open plains of the Oligocene.