Title
Piscivory in a Miocene Cetotheriidae of peru: First record of fossilized stomach content for an extinct baleen-bearing whale
Date Issued
01 December 2015
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Collareta A.
Landini W.
Lambert O.
Post K.
Tinelli C.
Di Celma C.
Panetta D.
Tripodi M.
Salvadori P.A.
Caramella D.
Marchi D.
Bianucci G.
Publisher(s)
Springer Verlag
Abstract
Instead of teeth, modern mysticetes bear hairfringed keratinous baleen plates that permit various bulkfiltering predation techniques (from subsurface skimming to lateral benthic suction and engulfment) devoted to various target prey (from small invertebrates to schooling fish). Current knowledge about the feeding ecology of extant cetaceans is revealed by stomach content analyses and observations of behavior. Unfortunately, no fossil stomach contents of ancient mysticetes have been described so far; the investigation of the diet of fossil baleen whales, including the Neogene family Cetotheriidae, remains thus largely speculative. We report on an aggregate of fossil fish remains found within a mysticete skeleton belonging to an undescribed late Miocene (Tortonian) cetotheriid from the Pisco Formation (Peru). Micro-computed tomography allowed us to interpret it as the fossilized content of the forestomach of the host whale and to identify the prey as belonging to the extant clupeiform genus Sardinops. Our discovery represents the first direct evidence of piscivory in an ancient edentulous mysticete. Since among modern mysticetes only Balaenopteridae are known to ordinarily consume fish, this fossil record may indicate that part of the cetotheriids experimented some degree of balaenopteridlike engulfment feeding. Moreover, this report corresponds to one of the geologically oldest records of Sardinops worldwide, occurring near the Tortonian peak of oceanic primary productivity and cooling phase. Therefore, our discovery evokes a link between the rise of Cetotheriidae; the setup of modern coastal upwelling systems; and the radiation of epipelagic, small-sized, schooling clupeiform fish in such highly productive environments.
Volume
102
Issue
70
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Biología marina, Biología de agua dulce, Limnología
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84949794120
PubMed ID
Source
Science of Nature
ISSN of the container
00281042
Source funding
Ministero dell’Istruzione, dell’Università e della Ricerca
Sponsor(s)
We thank W. Aguirre, A. J. Altamirano, E. Díaz, R. Salas-Gismondi, M. J. Laime-Molina, and R. Varas-Malca for their assistance at MUSM, Lima, and in the field and K. Gariboldi and A. Gioncada for their fruitful discussions. Comments by R. W. Boessenecker and two other anonymous reviewers improved the quality of this paper. This research was supported by a grant of the Italian Ministero dell’Istruzione, dell’Università e della Ricerca (PRIN Project 2012YJSBMK to G. B.), and by a National Geographic Society Committee for Research Exploration grant (9410–13 to G. B.).
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus