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Amphimachairodus hezhengensis lived in an open arid environment in Linxia Basin, caused by the uplifting of
Tibetan Plateau. Within the Dashengou Fauna, it would have coexisted with a number of other large carnivores including two species of medium-sized
agriotheriini bears, the
barbourofeline nimravid
Albanosmilus, fellow machairodont
Machairodus, and the huge hyena
Dinocrocuta.
Dinocrocuta was by far the most abundant carnivoran in the Dashengou Fauna, and would've practice
kleptoparasitism on
Amphimachairodus. Other carnivorans known from the area include skunks,
mustelids, and four species of small to medium-sized
hyenas.
A. giganteus was an inhabitant of woodlands and open floodplains as based on finds in
Pikermi in Greece and
Shanxi Province in China, indicating it had habitat preferences similar to modern lions in many respects. Specimens recovered from
Turolian deposits indicate that the fauna living there was much the same, differing only by species in many cases. Among the animals it shared its environment with were bovids such as
Parabos,
Lutung monkeys, the proboscidean
Anancus, the rhino
Aceratherium, antelopes such as
Tragoportax and
Miotragocerus as well as gazelles and deer, a very large species of
hyrax, early goats, various giraffes, camels such as
Paracamelus, the horse
Hipparion, a species of
aardvark, the
chalicothere Ancylotherium and the beaver-like
Dipoides. Other carnivores it shared its territory with include the
percrocutid hyena
Dinocrocuta, the agriotheriini bear
Agriotherium, fellow machairodonts
Metailurus and
Paramachairodus and hyenas like
Thalassictis. The larger herbivores were likely common prey for
Amphimachairodus, and it likely would have competed with
Agriotherium for food, possibly yielding kills to the bear and possibly also stealing kills from hyenas such as
Thalassictis and from
Metailurus when the opportunity arose.
A. horribilis lived in a multitude of paleoenvironments such as open woodland and open grassland. It shared its environment with forested mammals such as
primates,
chalicotheres, and the deer
Eostyloceros. While in open grassland, it coexisted with the dwarf horse
Sivalhippus platyodus and giraffids such as
Honanotherium and
Samotherium, although the latter was rare and low in taxonomy diversity. This species of
Amphimachairodous was probably a hunter of these horses due to their less cursorial postcranial skeleton, with giraffids being less ideal prey due to their height. It would have also lived alongside the large pig
Kubanochoerus. Within the Yangjishan Fauna,
A. horribilis coexisted with a large number of carnivorans including agriotheriini
Agriotherium and
ursavini Ursavus tedfordi,
ailuridae Simocyon, at least seven species of hyenas (Including
Adcrocuta), and mustelids such as large
gulonine Plesiogulo crassa,
meline Parataxidea, and
Martes. Within this fauna, felids were more abundant compared to Dashengou Fauna making up 28.6% of carnivorans present.
A. horribilis was an abundant and dominant large carnivore in the fauna. Other than
A. horribilis, contemporary felids included
Pontosmilus,
Paramacherodus,
Metailurus,
Yoshi minor, and
Pristifelis. The lack of
civet-like and
mongoose-like insectivore/omnivore suggests the environment was probably open. In North America, in places such as
Coffee Ranch in Texas,
A. coloradensis shared territory with
Huracan, but also shared territory with felids such as
Nimravides and
Lynx, canids such as
Vulpes,
Epicyon and
Borophagus, and herbivores like the camels
Aepycamelus and
Hemiauchenia the pronghorn antelope
Cosoryx, horses like
Dinohippus, Neohipparion and
Nannippus, the peccary
Prosthennops and rhinoceroses like
Teleoceras and
Aphelops. At the
Optima fossil site in
Oklahoma,
A. coloradensis coexisted with carnivorans such with the ursid
Huracan, canids like
Borophagus,
Eucyon, and
Vulpes. Herbivores it coexisted with was the ground sloth
Megalonyx, horses such as
Astrohippus,
Dinohippus,
Nannihippus, and
Neohipparion, rhinoceroses like
Teleoceras and
Aphelops, peccary
Platygonus, camels such as
Hemiauchenia and
Megatylopus, and the mammutid
Mastodon. Isotopic analysis suggests a high degree of niche partitioning within the carnivore guild with
A. coloradensis having a preference for horses (61.4%) as opposed to camels, mastodons, pronghorns & rhinos (38.7%). In the Djurab desert in northern Chad,
A. kabir co-existed with fellow machairodonts
Lokotunjailurus,
Tchadailurus and early representatives of the genera
Dinofelis and
Megantereon. In addition, animals such as crocodiles, three-toed horses, fish, monkeys, hippos, aardvarks, turtles, rodents, giraffes, snakes, antelopes, pigs, mongooses, foxes, hyenas, otters, honey badgers and the hominid
Sahelanthropus dwelled here, providing ample food. Based on these and other fossils, it is theorized that the Djurab was once the shore of a lake, generally forested close to the shore with savannah-like areas some distance away. The great number of cat species in the environment indicates that there was significant prey and available niches for multiple species of large felids to coexist. Due to its large size,
A. kabir probably predated upon anthracotheriids such as
Libycosaurus and subadult individuals of
hippopotamids and proboscideans. Within Langebaanweg, it would've coexisted with machairodonts like as
Dinofelis,
Yoshi, and
Lokotunjailurus, mustelids like
Sivaonyx and
Plesiogulo, the bear
Agriotherium, the hyena
Hyaenictis, and the canid
Eucyon. ==References==