Pseudoprepotherium is a member of the Mylodontidae family within the suborder (Folivora). The Mylodontidae, in turn, are often placed together with the
Scelidotheriidae in the superfamily of the
Mylodontoidea. In a classic system based on skeletal anatomical features, the Mylodontoidea form a sister group to the Megatherioidea and thus one of the two major lineages of sloths. Molecular genetic analyses and protein studies also differentiate a third large lineage from the
Megalocnoidea. According to the results of the latter two analysis methods, the Mylodontoidea with the two-toed sloths (
Choloepus) also includes one of the two sloth genera that still exist today. The Mylodontidae form one of the most diverse groups within the sloths. Characteristic features can be found in the high-crowned teeth, which, unlike those of the Megatherioidea and Megalocnoidea, have a rather flat (
lobate) possess chewing surface. This particular tooth structure is widely thought to reflect a greater adaptation to grassy diets. The posterior teeth are round, oval or more complex in cross-section and correspond to molar-like teeth. The foremost tooth is designed like a canine. The rear foot also clearly shows twists so that the sole points inwards. The mylodonts can be detected for the first time in the Oligocene. One of the earliest forms is
Paroctodontotherium from
Salla-Luribay in
Bolivia. The internal organization of the Mylodontidae is complex and currently under discussion. A relatively wide recognition usually only finds the late development lines with the Mylodontinae and Lestodontinae, as several studies have shown since 2004, but they are sometimes also discussed negatively. However, other lineages associated with the Nematheriinae, the Octomylodontinae, or the Urumacotheriinae, depending on the author, are more controversial. The latter, in particular, summarizes the late Miocene representatives of northern South America. In principle, many researchers urge a revision for the entire family since many higher taxonomic units have no formal diagnosis. The position of
Pseudoprepotherium within the Mylodontidae is, therefore, ambiguous since the genus is largely defined by the limb bones. Based on their characteristics, phylogenetic analyzes indicate that
Pseudoprepotherium is more closely related to some more modern representatives, such as
Thinobadistes, a form widely found in Central and North America. However, the limb bones usually only offer a limited selection of features for determining family relationships. Therefore, investigations on the little skull material see
Pseudoprepotherium clearly more basally embedded in the mylodonts and move the form partly closer to
Urumacotherium, but also to the Scelidotheriidae. The term
Pseudoprepotherium was scientifically introduced in 1961 by Robert Hoffstetter. He mentioned them in a publication of a skeletal description of
Planops, a member of the Megatheriidae from the Santa Cruz Formation of Patagonia's Early and Middle Miocene. He also referred to the genus
Prepotherium, which also occurs there and is closely related. Both had already been described by Florentino Ameghino at the end of the 19th century using finds from the Santa Cruz Formation. In 1934, R. Lee Collins referred a femur from the Río Yuca Formation on the Río Tucupido near Guanare in the Venezuelan state of Portuguesa to
Prepotherium and set up with it the new species
Prepotherium venezuelanum. In 1961, Hoffstetter classified this femur as part of the
Prepotherium genus based on anatomical differences and established a new one with
Pseudoprepotherium . At first, he saw their systematic position as ambiguous. In 1985, Sue Hirschfeld moved
Pseudoprepotherium to the Mylodontidae. Their assessment was based on extensive finds from the important Middle Miocene fossil site of La Venta in Colombia in connection with Collins' thigh find. In hindsight, Hirschfeld's characterization diagnosis turned out to be incorrect since Collins' find from the Río Yuca Formation and the La Venta material is from today's perspective assigned to different genera, but their assessment of the position of
Pseudoprepotherium is based on the characteristics of the femur divided until today. A total of three species of
Pseudoprepotherium are currently considered to be valid today: •
P. socorrensis (Carlini, Scillato-Yané & Sánchez, 2006) •
P. urumaquensis ( Carlini, Scillato-Yané & Sánchez, 2006) •
P. venezuelanum ( Collins, 1934)
P. venezuelanum is the type species and the smallest representative with a femur length of around 42 cm. It is based on the form introduced by R. Lee Collins in 1934 as
Prepotherium venezuelanum. The other two species, which are significantly larger with femur lengths of 56 to 59 cm, were recognized in 2006 by a work team led by Alfredo A. Carlini but were originally included in the genus
Mirandabradys . Carlini and colleagues had defined this using numerous finds from the Urumaco sequence in the Falcón Basin of north-western Venezuela, the chronological range of which includes the Middle and Upper Miocene. However, a 2020 revision of the fossil remains by Ascanio D. Rincón and H. Gregory McDonald led to the dissolution of the genus and relegation to the genus
Pseudoprepotherium, largely based on the design of the femur. A third species
, named
Mirandabradys zabasi by Carlini
et al, also from the Urumaco sequence, is considered a nomen dubium because its femur does not show the corresponding diagnostic features of
Mirandabradys or
Pseudoprepotherium (a femur of
Mirandabradys zabasi was originally assigned to the giant
Lestodon, which did not occur in northern South America; Carlini et al. 2006 simultaneously removed the femur of
Mirandabradys zabasi and reassigned the rest, a skull, to
Bolivartherium, to which they attributed further skeletal material; Rincón and McDonald, in turn, kept only the skull at
Bolivartherium in 2020 and split off
Magdalenabradys based on the postcranial skeletal elements ). As early as 1985, Sue Hirschfeld named the species
Pseudoprepotherium confusum. A skull and several limb bones from La Venta formed this basis. Referring to deviations in the structure of the femur, Rincón and McDonald reclassified the 2020 form as the type species of the new genus
Magdalenabradys. == Paleoecology ==