Neck function and predatory behavior in the scimitar toothed catHomotherium latidens(Owen)

Abstract
The morphology of the cervical vertebrae and skull structures associated with the neck musculature was studied in the felid sabertooth Homotherium latidens from the Spanish early Pleistocene site of Incarcal. Cervical anatomy of Homotherium was compared to that of modern pantherine cats, Smilodon, and other sabertoothed carnivores, and the relationship between neck function and killing behavior was investigated. Homotherium latidens possesses the structures associated with the canine shear-bite, as described in Smilodon. Our study of muscle insertion areas in the cervical vertebrae of Homotherium does not support previous statements about unusually strong scalenes and their role in stabbing. Instead, we see evidence of increased muscular control of various movements of the neck, including lateral flexion, depression and extension. These features, and the greater relative length of the neck in Homotherium and other machairodonts, are interpreted as adaptations for delivering a canine shear-bite in precise areas of the body of relatively large prey.