Ambondro mahabo is a
mammal from the
middle Jurassic (about 167 million years ago) of
Madagascar. The only species of the genus
Ambondro, it is known from a fragmentary
lower jaw with three teeth, interpreted as the last
premolar and the first two
molars. The premolar consists of a central
cusp with one or two smaller cusps and a
cingulum (shelf) on the inner, or lingual, side of the tooth. The molars also have such a lingual cingulum. They consist of two groups of cusps: a
trigonid of three cusps at the front and a
talonid with a main cusp, a smaller cusp, and a crest at the back. Features of the talonid suggest that
Ambondro had
tribosphenic molars, the basic arrangement of molar features also present in
marsupial and
placental mammals. It is the oldest known mammal with putatively tribosphenic teeth; at the time of its discovery it antedated the second oldest example by about 25 million years.