Title
Nasal compartmentalization in Kogiidae (Cetacea, Physeteroidea): insights from a new late Miocene dwarf sperm whale from the Pisco Formation
Date Issued
01 August 2021
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Publisher(s)
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract
Facial compartmentalization in the skull of extant pygmy whales (Kogiidae) is a unique feature among cetaceans that allows for the housing of a wide array of organs responsible for echolocation. Recent fossil findings indicate a remarkable disparity of the facial bone organization in Miocene kogiids, but the significance of such a rearrangement for the evolution of the clade has been barely explored. Here we describe Kogia danomurai sp. nov., a late Miocene (c. 5.8 Ma) taxon from the Pisco Formation (Peru), based on a partially preserved skull with a new facial bone pattern. Phylogenetic analysis recovers K. danomurai as the most basal representative of the extant genus Kogia, displaying a combination of derived (incipiently developed and excavated sagittal facial crest) and plesiomorphic features (high position of the temporal fossa, and antorbital notch not transformed into a narrow slit). Furthermore, when compared with the extant Kogia, the facial patterning found in K. danomurai indicates differential development among the facial organs, implying different capabilities of sound production relative to extant Kogia spp. Different facial bone patterns are particularly notable within the multi-species kogiid assemblage of the Pisco Formation, which suggests causal connections between different patterns and feeding ecologies (e.g. nekton piscivory and benthic foraging). At c. 5.8 Ma, K. danomurai was part of a cetacean community composed of clades typical of the late Miocene, and of other early representatives of extant taxa, a mixture probably representing an initial shift of the coastal faunas toward the ecosystem dynamics of the present-day south-eastern Pacific.
Start page
1507
End page
1524
Volume
7
Issue
3
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Paleontología
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85100348810
Source
Papers in Palaeontology
ISSN of the container
20562802
Sponsor(s)
Our gratitude to G. Billet, C. de Muizon (both MNHN), R. C. Hulbert Jr and C. L. McCaffery (both FLMNH), C. Sorbini (MSNUP), O. Lambert (IRSNB), Daniel Robineau and C. Lefèvre (both MNHN), E. Cioppi, L. Bellucci and S. Dominici (all MGPUF), G. Insacco (MSNC), G. Manganelli (Dipartimento di Scienze Fisiche, della Terra e dell'Ambiente, Università di Siena, Italy), F. Cancelli (MUSNAF), and D. J. Bohaska, C. W. Potter, and N. D. Pyenson (all USNM), for providing access to the specimens under their care. We extend our gratitude to F. Paolucci (MLP), G. Bianucci (UNIPI), G. Aguirre (PIM-UZH), R. Varas (MUSM), C. de Muizon (MNHN) and O. Lambert (IRSNB) for fruitful discussions on fossil cetaceans, specially sperm whales. We also extend our gratitude to T. Park, E. Fitzgerald, S. Thomas, R. Bennion and one anonymous referee for their constructive comments that further improved the quality of this manuscript. The authors further wish to emphasize their gratefulness to Prof. Dan Omura, to whom this species is dedicated, for his constant support of palaeontology in Peru. We wish to express our gratitude to the Tomatis Korrodi family for donating a skull of Kogia breviceps to the MUSM collection which greatly helped this research. The authors also wish to extend their thanks to Carlos Jaramillo (STRI) and Marcelo R. Sánchez-Villagra (PIM-UZH) for their support while this research project was being executed. This research was supported by funds to AB-P as part of his Ernst Mayr Short-Term Fellowship at STRI, Panama (Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute). Fieldwork was supported by the Peruvian FONDECYT MAGNET program (contract No. 007-2017-UPCH-FONDECYT).
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus