The second paper that I published this year (freely available online here at App.pan.pl), and did not get
around to discussing on this blog, was a paper I published with Frank Perry
(Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History) and Jonathan Geisler (NYIT College of
Osteopathic Medicine) in Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. This study reported
some new fossils of Pliocene globicephaline whales from the Purisima Formation
near Santa Cruz. Generally, most
papers I have published are concerned with fossils I’ve dug up myself, with a
few exceptions – this being one of them. In summer 2009, I received a forwarded
email from Frank Perry including some photographs of a fragmentary odontocete
skull in a partial concretion. Frank (at first) was not excited, but I was
puzzled at the relative size of the scale bar – it was one of those clear
plastic rulers made for kids, and after looking at the whole image at large
size, I noticed that it was not a 6” ruler, but a 12” ruler – indicating the
preserved fragment was about a foot and a half long (~40 cm). This was no
porpoise or small dolphin – this was something big, pilot whale or beluga sized
– a substantial beast indeed.
The prepared fossil globicephaline skull from the Purisima Formation, collected by Robin Eisenman in 2009 from the shore of Monterey Bay. From Boessenecker et al. (2013).
I emailed Frank about this, who gave me the contact
information for the collector – Robin Eisenman, then of Aptos – who after only
a few minutes on the phone happily agreed to contribute the fossil to science.
So, I picked it up, and took it back to Montana
State University
to prepare it. Preparation did not take long, owing to great separation of the
rock from the bone. On a subsequent visit back home, I drove down to Watsonville
to check out the collection of Stan Jarocki, a dedicated amateur paleontologist
with one of the best eyes for finding fossils I’ve ever come across,
professional or otherwise. I’ve been in the field several times with Stan, and
every time it’s amazing what he’s able to pull out from just a couple square
millimeters of exposed bone. Stan is perhaps best known for establishing a
rather large collection of bird fossils from the Purisima Formation, including
numerous beaks and braincases, not to mention prized complete humeri and other
diagnostic postcranial bones. I was quite amazed to see the first drawer in his
collection, which was an entire drawer filled with nothing but dolphin ear
bones - baleen whale ear bones were in a
separate drawer. Among these new finds were several Herpetocetus
periotics which he permitted me to take for donation to UCMP
and study, in addition to a neonatal or perinatal partial mandible of Herpetocetus;
these specimens will be described in detail whenever I get around to writing up
my Purisima Herpetocetus research. In the dolphin ear bone drawer I saw
dozens of periotics which were obviously the “river” dolphin Parapontoporia,
various phocoenid periotics, and several delphinine periotics (often identified
in the literature as “Delphinus or Stenella”). Among the
phocoenid periotics, two looked superficially similar to a phocoenid mentioned
by Larry Barnes in his Ph.D. dissertation as “aff. Tursiops” which is
now known to be a Haborophocoena-like phocoenid with an asymmetrical
skull – but were much, much larger. I looked at them, and concluded they must
be some sort of large delphinid.
The skull in lateral and posterior view, with a line drawing of endocast features. From Boessenecker et al. (2013).
Now, at first I didn’t know what the skull represented – I
thought it was some sort of massive monodontid, something a bit weirder and larger
than the pilot whale convergent monodontid Denebola brachycephala. It
wasn’t until I was flipping through the plates of Van Beneden and Gervais
(1880) – one of the great cetological monographs – that I realized that the
skull was a good match for a globicephaline whale. Not too long after this, I
contacted Jonathan Geisler, and proposed we present it as a poster at the 2009
SVP meeting – which I presented at the Bristol
meeting of SVP, and if you look at the abstract, it says we identified it as Globicephala
sp. We eventually decided it wasn’t referable to the genus, but certainly the
subfamily. The fossil exhibits some features distinctive to the subfamily, such
as large size, anteriorly widening premaxillae, and premaxillae that slope
medially on the base of the rostrum; however, the development of a longitudinal
ridge on the premaxilla precluded referral to any extant globicephaline.
Furthermore, the ventral side of the skull actually had some features that were
more like Pseudorca than Globicephala, something that Jonathan
Geisler and I found out on a visit to the AMNH in January 2011.
The two globicephaline periotics collected by Stan Jarocki from the Purisima Formation in Santa Cruz County. From Boessenecker et al. (2013).
On a short tangential side note, Jonathan Geisler had
invited me to contribute to a webpage on the NYCOM (Now NYIT College of
Osteopathic Medicine) website about cetacean evolution – but due to a quirk in New
York laws, I’d have to fly out to Long
Island and sign everything in person. So, Jonathan graciously paid
for me to fly out, sign the paperwork, and hang out in New
York for a week – including a day trip to the AMNH.
Even though it’s only a one hour drive from Manhattan,
it took us two hours by train and subway to get there from NYIT. Upon arriving
from my flight and getting a cab ride to Old Westbury (the driver had no idea
where it was, and it took him until 30 minutes into the drive to figure out
where it was) – two pieces of bad news presented themselves. The first was that
I had been rejected from the SDSU-UCR joint doctoral program; the second was
that I had taken the globicephaline fossil with me, and it had broken in
transit. I noted that it would be an easy fix, but still… talk about
circumstance kicking someone when they’re down.
Bivariate plot of promontorium length and maximum width of bony nares for Delphinida (based on adult crania), with horizontal line for the skull, and vertical lines for the two periotics. This indicates that the periotics are probably too small to belong to the same taxon as the skull, and that two globicephalines are recorded in the Purisima Formation. From Boessenecker et al. (2013).
So, enough with the backstory, time for some more science.
After examining the two periotics that Stan Jarocki collected, Jonathan noted
that they appeared a bit on the small side to go along with the skull that
Robin Eisenman collected – which got him on to thinking that there may have
been two separate globicephalines preserved in the Purisima Formation. In order
to evaluate this, Jonathan used a bunch of measurements that he had amassed as
part of an NSF funded project on delphinidan phylogeny. He used two
measurements in particular: external bony nares width, and the length of the
promontorium. When these measurements for fossil and modern delphinidans are
plotted on a graph, a distinct trend can be seen – although there is quite a
bit of scatter around the line of best fit. Regardless, the results do indeed
suggest that the periotics are far too small to represent the same globicephaline
as the skull: using the line of best fit, the skull size (narial width = 110mm)
would be associated with periotics that had a 21mm long promontorium on the
periotic, and the periotics instead have ~15mm long promontoria, which would be
associated with a skull approximately half the size (narial width = 60mm). This
line of evidence suggests that there were indeed two globicephalines present in
the Purisima Formation. Interestingly, this is one of the only localities in
the Pacific realm to include more than one globicephaline.
Geographic distribution of late Miocene, Pliocene, and Pleistocene fossil globicephalines. Black denotes described or figured specimens. From Boessenecker et al. (2013).
Lastly, we reviewed the globicephaline fossil record, and
found that the subfamily was already worldwide in distribution by the early
Pliocene. Molecular divergence date estimations for the clade include estimates
as old as 8 Ma (Vilstrup et al., 2011) and as young as 4 Ma (McGowen et al.,
2009). Few globicephalines are any older than 6 Ma, and the late Miocene is one
of the most intensely sampled parts of the cetacean fossil record; we suggested
that divergence dates as old as 8 Ma are probably too old, and likewise by 4 Ma
we already have globicephaline fossils – indicating that 4 Ma is certainly too
young. Divergence dates of about 5.5 Ma (Cunha et al., 2011) are probably more
accurate. Discovery of additional (and better preserved) globicephaline fossils
will help refine this picture.
References
Boessenecker, R.W., Perry, F.A., Geisler, J.H. 2013.
Globicephaline whales from the Mio-Pliocene Purisima Formation of central California,
USA. Acta
Palaeontologica Polonica.
Cunha,
H.A., Moraes, L.C., Medeiros, B.V., Lailson-Brito, J. Jr., da Silva, V.M.F.
2011. Phylogenetic status and timescale for the diversification of Steno
and Sotalia dolphins.
PLoS ONE 6 (12): e28297.
McGowen,
M.R., Spaulding, M., and Gatesy, J. 2009. Divergence date estimation and a
comprehensive molecular tree of extant cetaceans. Molecular
Phylogenetics and Evolution 53: 891-906.
Vilstrup,
J.T., Ho, S.Y.W., Foote, A.D., Morin, P.A., Kreb, D., Krützen, M., Parra, G.J.,
Robertson, K.M., Stephanis, R. de, Verborgh, P., Willerslev, E., Orlando, L.,
Gilbert, M.T.P. 2011. Mitogenomic phylogenetic analyses of the Delphinidae with
an emphasis on the Globicephalinae. BMC Evolutionary Biology 11:65:
1-10.
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