Arktocara

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Arktocara
Temporal range: Oligocene 29–24  Ma
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Arktocara NT small.jpg
Artistic reconstruction
Scientific classification Red Pencil Icon.png
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Infraorder: Cetacea
Superfamily: Platanistoidea
Family: Allodelphinidae
Genus: Arktocara
Boersma and Pyenson, 2016
Species:
A. yakataga
Binomial name
Arktocara yakataga
Boersma and Pyenson, 2016

Arktocara is an extinct genus of river dolphin from the Oligocene epoch of Alaska, containing one species, A. yakataga. Having been discovered in 25-million-year-old strata near the 60th parallel north, it is perhaps the oldest known crown toothed whale and the northmost river dolphin discovered. It was a member of the now-extinct family Allodelphinidae, along with the genera Allodelphis , Goedertius , Ninjadelphis , and Zarhinocetus . It measured approximately 2.26 or 2.28 meters (7.4 or 7.5 ft), comparable to its closest living relative, the South Asian river dolphin, which measures 2.4 meters (7.9 ft). However, the animal probably had an elongated beak and neck, so it may have been longer. The animal is known only from a partially preserved skull. Its ecology may have been similar to the modern day Dall's porpoise, and it may have competed with contemporaneous delphinoids. Its remains were found in the Poul Creek Formation, which has also yielded several mollusk species.

Contents

Taxonomy

The type specimen, the only specimen, of Arktocara yakataga, an incomplete skull, was collected by geologist Donald J. Miller in 1951 in the Poul Creek Formation, who was mapping the Yakataga District, from where the species name yakataga derives from, on behalf of the United States Geological Survey (USGS). The genus name Arktocara derives from Ancient Greek arktos (north) and cara (face), translating to "the face of the north". "Yakataga" translates to "canoe road" in the Tlingit language, which is apparently a reference to the reefs which form a canoe passage to a village. Arktocara was later described 65 years after the collection of the skull (labelled as specimen USNM 214830) by Smithsonian paleontologists Alexandra Boersma and Nicholas Pyenson in 2016, being recognized as a new species. [1] [2]

Platanistoidea

Waipatia maerewhenua

Microcetus hectori

Otekaikea huata

Otekaikea marplesi

Squalodelphis fabianii

Zarhinocetus errabundus

Goedertius oregonensis

Arktocara yakataga

Allodelphis pratti

Phocageneus venustus

Notocetus vanbenedeni

Platanista gangetica (South Asian river dolphin)

Pomatodelphis inaequalis

Zarhachis flagellator

Other toothed whales

Relationships of Arktocara within Platanistoidea [1]

Blue = Allodelphinidae

Arktocara was a river dolphin of the superfamily Platanistoidea, and the extinct family Allodelphinidae. The sole surviving member of Platanistoidea is the South Asian river dolphin (Platanista gangetica) which inhabits the tropics, making it its closest living relative. Allodelphinidae also included the genera Allodelphis , Goedertius , Ninjadelphis , and Zarhinocetus . Its discovery further reinforces the theory that the Platanistoidea river dolphins originated in the oceans. Of the characteristics it shared with other platanistoids was a cylindrical projection of the periotic bone in the ear, deeply grooved rostral sutures on the beak, the widening of the cranium, a depression on the roof of the orbit in the eye socket, a smaller exposed palatine bone in the roof of the mouth, an elongated and convex spine in the tympanic bulla of the ear, single rooted back-teeth, and more than 25 teeth. [1] [3]

Description

Arktocara was around 2.26 or 2.28 meters (7.4 or 7.5 ft) in length, based on the distance from cheekbone to cheekbone, and it may have had a similar size to the modern-day South Asian river dolphin, which is 2.4 meters (7.9 ft) in length and 85 kilograms (187 lb) in weight. Based on other allodelphinids, it probably had a long beak; and it also had a long neck, as identified by the elongated, unfused cervical vertebrae in the neck. This is unusual in other cetaceans which generally have a short neck with short and fused cervical vertebrae. This elongated neck may have made it longer than the estimated size. [1]

Unlike other platanistoids, Arktocara had a sagittal crest, and its frontal sinuses were positioned behind the nasals. The nostrils were oriented vertically, and the premaxilla formed a rectangular plateau surrounding them. The nostrils were perhaps 1.9 by 1.6–2.1 centimeters (0.75 by 0.63–0.83 in). The lacrimal bone in the eye socket wrapped around the outer edge of the brow ridge and was fused to the cheek bones. It further differed from other platanistoids in that it had a smaller process of the squamosal, that is, a projection from its skull. The frontonasal suture between the eyes on the brow ridge, which separates the frontal bone from the nasal bone, was U-shaped. The sutures indicate that the specimen was an adult. It lacked on the upper side of its head a condyloid fossa, a depression between the head and the neck; and had a symmetrical vertex, the upper part of the head. Also contrary to other platanistoids, Arktocara lacked the thin plate which extended from the hard palate in the roof of the mouth and attached to the greater wing of sphenoid bone in the ear. It lacked a maxillary crest, a bony projection from the maxillary and palatine bones in the roof of the mouth that runs along the nasal septum which separates the two nostrils. It did not have a large tympanosquamosal recess, which in cetaceans receives an air-filled sinus originating from the middle ear. The groove for the mandibular branch nerve wrapped around the sides of the pterygoid fossa, which is located behind the eyes laterally on the sphenoid bone. [1]

Paleobiology

Despite being labelled as a river dolphin, Arktocara, much like other ancient platanistoids, was likely a coastal, ocean-going cetacean. Its lifestyle and diet is speculated to have been similar to the modern day Dall's porpoise (Phocoenoides dalli), [4] which is an opportunistic twilight-to-surface predator of soft-bodied fish and squid. [5] Paleontologists Ewan Fordyce and Christian de Muizon speculated in 2001 that, since the modern day platanistoid, the South Asian river dolphin, inhabits the rivers, ancient platanistoids, such as Arktocara, faced some competition from other dolphins of the superfamily Delphinoidea, and were eventually outcompeted in marine environments. However, this theory has not been properly explored yet. [1]

Paleoecology

Map of the Poul Creek Formation in Alaska Arktocara map.png
Map of the Poul Creek Formation in Alaska

Found near the 60th parallel north, Arktocara inhabited the subarctic waters of Alaska, and is the northernmost river dolphin known. Arktocara lived somewhere between 29 and 24 million years ago (mya), from the Rupelian to Chattian ages of the Oligocene epoch, making it the oldest crown toothed whale (Odontoceti), besides possibly Waipatia hectori from 25.2 mya. This time period is thought to have been characterized by the diversification of cetaceans. [1] Many mollusks were found in the Poul Creek Formation that were contemporaneous with Arktocara, such as the nautilus species Aturia alaskensis and A. angustata ; gastropod species such as Scaphander alaskensis and Turritella hamiltonensis ; and pelecypods such as Venericardia yakatagensis and Cyclocardia yakatagensis . [6]

See also

Related Research Articles

Cetacea Whales, dolphins, and porpoises

Cetaceans are aquatic mammals constituting the infraorder Cetacea. Key characteristics are their fully aquatic lifestyle, streamlined body shape, often large size and exclusively carnivorous diet. They propel themselves through the water with powerful up-and-down movement of their tail which ends in a paddle-like fluke, using their flipper-shaped forelimbs to maneuver.

River dolphin Superfamily of dolphins

River dolphins are a polyphyletic group of fully aquatic mammals that reside exclusively in freshwater or brackish water. They are an informal grouping of dolphins, which itself is a paraphyletic group within the infraorder Cetacea. Extant river dolphins are placed in two superfamilies, Platanistoidea and Inioidea. They comprise the extant families Platanistidae, Iniidae and Pontoporiidae. There are five extant species of river dolphins. River dolphins, alongside other cetaceans, belong to the clade Artiodactyla, with even-toed ungulates, and their closest living relatives the hippopotamuses, from which they diverged about 40 million years ago. Specific types of Dolphins can be pink.

Platanistidae Family of dolphins

Platanistidae is a family of river dolphins containing the extant Ganges river dolphin and Indus river dolphin but also extinct relatives from marine deposits in the Neogene.

Evolution of cetaceans Derivation of cetaceans from an artiodactyl precursor, and the adaptive radiation of cetacean species

The evolution of cetaceans is thought to have begun in the Indian subcontinent from even-toed ungulates 50 million years ago and to have proceeded over a period of at least 15 million years. Cetaceans are fully aquatic marine mammals belonging to the order Artiodactyla and branched off from other artiodactyls around 50 mya. Cetaceans are thought to have evolved during the Eocene or earlier and to share a relatively recent closest common ancestor with hippopotamuses. Being mammals, they surface to breathe air; they have 5 finger bones (even-toed) in their fins; they nurse their young; and, despite their fully aquatic life style, they retain many skeletal features from their terrestrial ancestors. Research conducted in the late 1970s in Pakistan revealed several stages in the transition of cetaceans from land to sea.

<i>Prosqualodon</i> Extinct genus of mammals

Prosqualodon is an extinct genus of Early to Middle Miocene cetacean from Argentina, Australia, New Zealand and Venezuela.

<i>Odobenocetops</i> Extinct genus of mammals

Odobenocetops is an extinct genus of small toothed whale known from Peru and Chile. Its fossils are found in Neogene-aged marine strata dating from the Tortonian to the Zanclean. It had two tusks, and, in some fossils, one tusk was longer than the other.

<i>Janjucetus</i> Extinct genus of mammals

Janjucetus is an extinct genus of cetacean, and a basal baleen whale (Mysticeti), from the Late Oligocene around 25 million years ago (mya) off southeast Australia, containing one species J. hunderi. Unlike modern mysticetes, it possessed large teeth for gripping and shredding prey, and lacked baleen, and so was likely to have been a predator that captured large single prey animals rather than filter feeding. However, its teeth may have interlocked, much like those of the modern-day filter-feeding crabeater seal, which would have allowed some filter-feeding behavior. Its hunting behaviour was probably similar to the modern-day leopard seal, probably eating large fish. Like baleen whales, Janjucetus could not echolocate; however, it did have unusually large eyes, and so probably had an acute sense of vision. The only specimen was found on the Jan Juc beach, where the remains of the extinct whales Mammalodon, Prosqualodon and Waipatia have also been discovered.

<i>Australodelphis</i> Extinct genus of mammals

Australodelphis mirus is an extinct Pliocene dolphin. A. mirus is known from fossils found in the Sørsdal Formation, Mule Peninsula, Vestfold Hills, East Antarctica. The genus has been described as an example of convergent evolution with beaked whales.

Squalodontidae Extinct family of mammals

Squalodontidae or the shark-toothed dolphins is an extinct family of large toothed whales who had long narrow jaws. Squalodontids are known from all continents except Antarctica, from the Oligocene to the Neogene, but they had a maximal diversity and global distribution during the Late Oligocene and Early to Middle Miocene.

Auroracetus, from Aurora and the Latin cetus (whale), is a genus of Pontoporiidae, the river dolphins, and contains one extinct species. The species Auroracetus bakerae was published in 2009.

<i>Otekaikea</i> Extinct genus of mammals

Otekaikea is an extinct genus of toothed whale closely related to Waipatia. It is known from the late Oligocene (Chattian) of New Zealand.

Zarhinocetus is an extinct genus of whale from the Early to Middle Miocene of the eastern North Pacific.

<i>Allodelphis</i> Extinct genus of whale

Allodelphis is an extinct genus of whale belonging to Allodelphinidae found in marine deposits of the eastern North Pacific.

Allodelphinidae is a family of primitive platanistoid river dolphins found in marine deposits in the eastern North Pacific region, Alaska, and Japan.

Notocetus is an extinct genus of river dolphin belonging to Squalodelphinidae. Known specimens have been found in Early Miocene marine deposits from Argentina, Italy and Peru.

Phoberodon is a genus of archaic odontocete cetacean from the Early Miocene (Burdigalian) of Patagonia, Argentina.

Ninjadelphis is an extinct genus of river dolphin from the early Miocene (Burdigalian) of Japan.

<i>Kogia pusilla</i> Small fossil whale from Italy

Kogia pusilla is an extinct species of sperm whale from the Middle Pliocene of Italy related to the modern day dwarf sperm whale and pygmy sperm whale. It is known from a single skull discovered in 1877, and was considered a species of beaked whale until 1997. The skull shares many characteristics with other sperm whales, and is comparable in size to that of the dwarf sperm whale. Like the modern Kogia, it probably hunted squid in the twilight zone, and frequented continental slopes. The environment it inhabited was likely a calm, nearshore area with a combination sandy and hard-rock seafloor. K. pusilla likely died out due to the ice ages at the end of the Pliocene.

<i>Ankylorhiza</i> Extinct genus of toothed whales from the Oligocene epoch

Ankylorhiza is an extinct genus of toothed whale that lived in what is now the United States during the Oligocene epoch, between 29 and 23.5 million years ago. The type and only known species is A. tiedemani, though two fossil skeletons may represent an additional, second species within the genus. Ankylorhiza was about 4.8 meters (16 ft) long, with a long, robust skull bearing conical teeth that were angled forwards at the tip of the snout.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Boersma, A.; Pyenson, N. D. (2016). "Arktocara yakataga, a new fossil odontocete (Mammalia, Cetacea) from the Oligocene of Alaska and the antiquity of Platanistoidea". PeerJ. 4: e2321. doi:10.7717/peerj.2321. PMC   4991871 . PMID   27602287.
  2. "Evolution: New dolphin species found". Nature. 526 (7617): 377. 2016. Bibcode:2016Natur.536T.377.. doi: 10.1038/536377d .
  3. Arktocara at fossilworks .org (retrieved 16 November 2017)
  4. Switeck, B. (2016). "Smithsonian Researchers Uncover Extinct, Ancient River Dolphin Fossil Hiding in Their Own Collections". Smithsonian.com. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  5. Hammond, P.S.; Bearzi, G.; Bjørge, A.; Forney, K.A.; Karkzmarski, L.; Kasuya, T.; Perrin, W.F.; Scott, M.D.; Wang, J.Y.; Wells, R.S. & Wilson, B. (2012). "Phocoenoides dalli". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species . 2012: e.T17032A17118773. doi: 10.2305/IUCN.UK.2012.RLTS.T17032A17118773.en .
  6. Addicott, W. O.; Kanno, S.; Sakamoto, K.; Miller, D. J. (1971). "Clark's Tertiary Molluscan Types from the Yakataga District, Gulf of Alaska". Geological Survey Research, Chapter 3. United States Government Printing Office. p. 28.