Title
Scaphokogia totajpe, sp. nov., a new bulky-faced pygmy sperm whale (Kogiidae) from the late Miocene of Peru
Date Issued
02 November 2019
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Publisher(s)
Taylor and Francis Inc.
Abstract
The modern pygmy and dwarf sperm whales (Physeteroidea, Kogiidae) are remnants of a highly diverse group, which flourished in the Miocene oceans. Unlike their modern suction-feeding, deep-diving relatives, the past diversity of this family includes animals with disparate ecological habits. Here, we describe Scaphokogia totajpe, sp. nov., a new species of kogiid based on a well-preserved skull from the upper Miocene strata of the Pisco Formation, Peru. A phylogenetic analysis places S. totajpe as sister taxon of S. cochlearis and divides Kogiidae into two clades: the first including both species of Scaphokogia and the second including Kogia, Koristocetus, Praekogia, and Nanokogia. Similar to S. cochlearis, S. totajpe has a tubular rostrum with a hypertrophied mesorostral canal, a large supracranial basin, and a leftward deviated facial sagittal crest, but it differs by possessing a proportionately shorter rostrum, a reduced projection of the lacrimojugal between the frontal and the maxilla, and a flat occipital shield. The cranial morphology of Scaphokogia indicates that the extent of the nasal complex was greater than in modern kogiids. Furthermore, the overall rostrum shape and the reconstructed muscle insertion sites indicate that Scaphokogia retained some plesiomorphic features related to a more generalist ecology. Inclusion of S. totajpe into the context of the Pisco Formation indicates that during the late Miocene, the Peruvian coastal system was a hot spot for the diversification of physeteroids, with at least four species coexisting. Finally, Scaphokogia totajpe highlights a late Miocene diversity peak for sperm whales in the global oceans, before the Pliocene odontocete turnover.
Volume
39
Issue
6
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Paleontología
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85083730190
Source
Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology
ISSN of the container
02724634
Sponsor(s)
This research was part of the undergraduate honors thesis conducted by A.B.-P. We thank G. Bianucci and A. Collareta (Università di Pisa, Pisa, Italy), O. Lambert (Institut Royal des Sciences Naturelles de Belgique, Brussels, Belgium), and C. de Muizon (MNHN) for helpful comments and discussions during early stages of the research as well as for comments on the manuscript; V. Pacheco, R. Ramirez, C. Aguilar, and N. Valencia (Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, Lima, Peru) for their support during the initial work; reviewers A. Collareta and S. J. Godfrey (Calvert Marine Museum, Solomon, Maryland, U.S.A.) and editor O. Lambert for their thorough and helpful review of our article; F. Paolucci (MLP); A. Altamirano, R. Varas, G. Olmedo, D. Omura, and J. Tejada (MUSM) for discussion on fossils from the Pisco Formation and their geological context; and G. Billet and C. de Muizon (MNHN), R. C. Hulbert Jr. and C. L. McCaffery (Florida Museum of Natural History, Gainesville, Florida, U.S.A.), and D. J. Bohaska, C. W. Potter, and N. D. Pyenson (USNM) for providing access to specimens under their care. We extend our gratitude to Josefina Rojas and the late Carlos Martin from the Paleontological Museum of Sacaco for their help during all these years. RS-G acknowledges support by the Peruvian FONDECYT-MAGNET programme to UPCH (contract number 007-2017-FONDECYT/CONCYTEC) This research was partly supported by funds to A.B.-P. as part of his internship at Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI), Panama.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus