X. bahiense was a
megafaunal
herbivore that probably looked very much like
Macrauchenia, weighing about . In life,
X. bahiense would have vaguely resembled a tall, humpless camel with three toes on each foot and either a
saiga-like
proboscis or a
moose-like nose.
Pictographs from the
Serranía de La Lindosa rock formation of
Guaviare,
Colombia, show what might possibly be
Xenorhinotherium with three toes and a trunk, though the claims are highly controversial, and it is uncertain whether they even date to the last Ice Age. Paired
δ13C and
δ18O measurements from fossils in the Brazilian Intertropical Region indicate that
X. bahiense was primarily a
browser. These findings are supported by its hypsodonty index. However, results derived from the
dental microwear of
X. bahiense contradict these findings and instead recover the species as a
grazer because of the high number of scratches on its
tooth enamel that typically indicate a highly abrasive, grass-based diet. Additionally,
X. bahiense inhabited semi-arid tropical environments, in contrast to its close relative
Macrauchenia patachonica, which inhabited subtropical to temperate environments that were more arid than those which
X. bahiense lived in. == Distribution ==