A right whale (Mysticeti, Balaenidae) from the Pleistocene of Taiwan (with dataset)
Journal
Zoological Letters
Journal Volume
5
Journal Issue
37
Date Issued
2019
Date
2019.12.28
Author(s)
C-H Chang
Abstract
Current patterns of biological distribution result from the deep past. Of particular interest, some closely related species appear at high latitudes of both hemispheres, but not in between, a pattern known as antitropical distribution. However, the timing, pathway, and drivers of antitropical distributions remain mostly unknown. Here we describe a new fossil, a left tympanic bulla (part of the ear bones), from the Middle/Late Pleistocene (0.78–0.01 mya, but not excluding the possibility of Holocene in age, as the specimen was dredged from the sea bottom and the geological horizon remains uncertain) of Taiwan. The tympanic bulla is diagnostic in baleen whales, and this specimen shows morphological features that are identical to extant <I>Eubalaena</I>, including: relatively large size (the anteroposterior length is 117 mm); rectangular outline in medial view; short anterior lobe, judging from the remaining of the lateral furrow; squared anterior margin; prominent transverse crease on the involucrum; transversely compressed in anterior view; well-developed and rounded outer lip; and parallel involucral and main ridges. Although incomplete, the morphological characters and overall similarity to extant <I>Eubalaena</I> allow a reliable taxonomic assignment to <I>Eubalaena</I> sp. The occurrence of a Pleistocene <I>Eubalaena</I> on the southern margin of the western North Pacific is the first balaenid fossil evidence indicative of the biotic interchange between two hemispheres leading to the origin of antitropical distribution in the Pleistocene; alternatively, this specimen might merely represent an extra-limital record of the North Pacific <I>Eubalaena</I>. Furthermore, this find suggests that the <I>Eubalaena</I> interchange, being one of the largest species displaying antitropical distribution pairs in the history of life, likely took place along the western Pacific. Notably, this does not preclude the <I>Eubalaena</I> interchange from other routes, such as the eastern Pacific or the Atlantic Ocean, and future finds should test the scenario for the biotic interchange between Northern and Southern Hemispheres of <I>Eubalaena</I>.
Type
journal article
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