Sunday, June 28, 2020

The terrible fossil record of sea otters, part 3: The oldest sea otter in the Pacific, revision of their biochronology, and future directions in otter paleontology and evolution

Make sure to read Part 1 and Part 2 of this blog series!

This is the finale to my three-part blog series on the evolution and fossil record of Enhydra - I hope that you leave with 1) a sense of clarity about what we *do* know after all and 2) a sense of longing for finding out more - there is simply a lot that we don't know, even about the history of rocky shore faunas in general. It is my profound hope that someone interested in otter evolution will read this and get inspired to look into one of these new directions. This series will be updated in the future as more on our fossil otter research comes to fruition - our studies of the Gubik Enhydra and expanded hypodigm of E. macrodonta are just starting - so there are no preliminary insights from either project I feel comfortable with sharing yet. Go forth and discover some fossil otters!

The Thornton Beach otter - the oldest Pacific basin Enhydra
When I was a Ph.D. student in New Zealand I was nearly as far away as you can get on earth from these sea otter bearing localities, and had already grown so frustrated with my lack of results that I gave up trying. Earlier in my career I had tried looking for Plio-Pleistocene marine mammal fossils in the Merced Formation, much, much closer to home – the Merced Formation is exposed on the San Mateo Peninsula between Pacifica and Ocean Beach in San Francisco. However, localities of this unit require very long hikes up and down cliffs that are several hundred feet tall, and at least a couple of areas where I have not exactly felt safe. My first visit had crime scene tape at one – which I ignored – and upon returning home, my mother, who is a judge, recalled “oh yeah, there was a murder down there last week.” No thanks!


The rugged type section of the Merced Formation - a critical stratigraphic section for studying invertebrate biostratigraphy and climate across the Pliocene-Pleistocene transition. This is the view north from Mussel Rock; Fort Funston is at that far point, and north of there, Thornton Beach and Ocean beach. The Marin Headlands are the far hills in the distance across the Golden Gate (not visible). Photo from californiabeaches.com
Marine mammal fossils do occur in the Merced Formation, but they are extremely rare relative to the Purisima Formation further south that I was more used to: the Merced Formation was deposited about 5-10 times as rapidly, so the bones are dispersed and do not occur in easily accessed phosphatic bonebeds. I did about a half dozen trips between 2004 and 2006 and didn’t find a single bone. Needless to say, I knew intuitively that if I did not find any fossils, someone else might- but I might be an old man before that happened, since the last marine mammals were collected in the 60s!


The femur after preparation was perhaps halfway complete - thanks to RE Fordyce, and Sophie White for letting me prepare this in the Otago Geology Museum preparation lab!

Needless to say, I was pleased, excited, and a little in shock when I received some photos of a bone in a concretion in an email from my buddy Chris Pirrone – a civil attorney in the bay area who is an avid, ethical, and very generous fossil collector. Chris has also helped me with several excavations of whale and dolphin skulls! This specimen appeared to be a five inch long sea otter femur, but about 3/4 of it was still embedded and there is no shortage of land mammal bones from the upper parts of the Merced Fm. Nevertheless, from the little that was exposed I was confident and so I asked Chris if he wouldn’t mind donating the fossil to UCMP – and he generously offered to mail the specimen to me in New Zealand for preparation. I spent about two weeks mechanically preparing the specimen and, in the process, developed a neck ache that refused to go away for about 5 months (I could only afford very cheap pillows in New Zealand, which did not permit my neck to recover quickly).


The published illustration of the Merced Fm. otter, complete with ammonium chloride coating! From Boessenecker (2018).


The excellent stratigraphic control of the Thornton Beach sea otter - thanks to high resolution strontium dates from Ingram and Ingle (1998).
After preparation, the femur appeared to be longer than modern Enhydra lutris (reported also for a couple Enhydra sp. femora from the Pleistocene of Oregon), but still very clearly a specimen of Enhydra. After asking Chris details about the locality and stratum, it became clear that it was from a very well-dated horizon – where individual Strontium isotope dates were collected and reported every 5-10 meters (Ingram and Ingle, 1998), which is unusually high resolution for what I am used to! So I waited to publish anything (also, so I could finish my thesis on eomysticetids) until I was able to visit the locality myself with Chris and he could point to the individual rock layer. We visited the spot together in Summer 2015 after Sarah and I had returned from New Zealand, and I was able to pinpoint the stratigraphic interval to a horizon bracketed by dates of 620,000 to 670,000 years. After exhaustive reading of the stratigraphic literature, this was clearly the oldest known specimen of Enhydra from the Pacific basin.

Possible hypotheses for sea otter evolution & biogeography
There are two major hypotheses used in the evolution of sea otters from riverine ancestors.
Hypothesis 1) Enhydra evolved in North America, from something like Enhydritherium – the only other Enhydra-like otter from the north American fossil record.
Hypothesis 2) Enhydra evolved somewhere in the old world and had a more recent dispersal to the Pacific – either westward through the Central American seaway prior to Panama uplift about 3 Ma or through the arctic afterwards, or perhaps from east Asia along the north Pacific coast.
Unfortunately, most of the fossils are super fragmentary, as discussed in the prior blog post – virtually all specimens of Enhydra are isolated elements and not complete enough to code. There are also not a whole lot of characters available, and even when adding some to the Wang et al. 2017 matrix, I didn’t get much out of it. Nevertheless, the Wang et al. phylogeny does cast doubt on a close relationship between Enhydritherium and Enhydra – echoing the comparisons by Lambert (1997) with the more completely preserved skeleton of Enhydritherium from Florida. While we don’t have a reliable phylogeny, we DO have some pretty reliable characters to identify these things – Enhydra teeth are very distinctive, and we do have geochronology. This information cannot answer problems of phylogeny (e.g. which forms of extinct Enhydra are more closely related) but it most certainly can tell us where Enhydra was and when.


The two different results of the phylogeny of lutrines (otters) by Wang et al. (2017); the one on the left is better resolved (50% majority rules consensus tree), and shows a close relationship between Enhydra and Enhydriodon, which is not resolved in the second phylogeny under Bayesian methods; however, a close relationship between Enhydra and Enhydritherium is unlikely owing to the well-resolved sister taxon relationship between Paludolutra and Enhydritherium

Revision of the biochronology of sea otters in the North Pacific
Hypothesis 1 listed above, endorsed by Mitchell (1966) and Repenning (1976), has two requirements: firstly, that fossils of Enhydra truly pre-date Enhydra reevei from the UK, and secondly, that there is a close relationship between Enhydra lutris and Enhydritherium. Phylogenetic analysis by Wang et al. (2017) calls the latter into question. So what about the dates? My review of up-to-date stratigraphic research found that all Pacific basin specimens of Enhydra are from the late or middle Pleistocene. In particular, the Timms Point Silt tooth which was so critical to Mitchell’s dismissal of Enhydra reevei – is no older than 400,000-500,000 years in age. The Timms Point Silt specimen is therefore at least 1-1.5 million years younger than the British specimens, and 100,000-200,000 years younger than Chris Pirrone’s femur from San Francisco. The significance here is that updated geochronology tells us that once again, Enhydra reevei is the oldest bone fide example of a fossil Enhydra anywhere in the world. This on its own, along with the re-shuffling of Pacific coast specimen ages, knocks out one of the two requirements for the Mitchell hypothesis and is suggestive of a relatively recent invasion of the Pacific basin. One caveat is that while late Pliocene strata like the San Diego Formation are very well-sampled, there are virtually zero early Pleistocene marine mammal bearing localities where more than ten individual specimens have been discovered anywhere in the eastern Pacific. As for the second requirement, a close relationship between Enhydra and Enhydritherium does not seem to be likely, thanks to the Wang et al. (2017) phylogeny.


Revised biochronology of Enhydra fossils. All of them. From Boessenecker (2018).

What about those fossils from Alaska? At least one or two specimens from the Gubik Formation indicate the presence of Enhydra in the Arctic about 1.5-2 million years ago, slightly younger than the British fossils. Because of these, and the fact that the Central American Seaway would have already been closed after 3 Ma, I proposed in my 2018 paper that Enhydra evolved from Enhydriodon in western Europe during the Pliocene and dispersed through the Arctic, into the North Pacific, during the early Pleistocene. An earlier dispersal is not tenable at present owing to the well-sampled San Diego Formation, and derivation from Enhydritherium seems unlikely.
This is quite surprising as it means that the modern kelp forest ecosystem, seemingly dependent on sea otters to keep urchin numbers down, was very different only one million years ago. Who used to eat all the urchins? I honestly have no idea – walruses don’t really eat urchins, to my knowledge, and they’re some of the only durophagous predators from the Pliocene.
In conclusion: the oldest bona fide Pacific basin fossils of Enhydra are less than one million years old, and since older fossils exist in the Atlantic, sea otters probably evolved in the late Pliocene in western Europe and immigrated to the North Pacific very recently.

Lingering questions
Why are sea otter fossils so rare? Even during their established geochronologic range, otter fossils are quite rare. To be honest, all marine mammals are rare in Pleistocene deposits – but it’s much easier to find pinniped fossils, for some reason. One argument is that otters tend to be restricted to rocky shore environments – which are environments characterized by erosion rather than deposition, so they’re already biased. Sea otters are quite small – and small vertebrates have a lower preservation potential than larger vertebrates, right? For example, there’s the ‘colloquial knowledge’ about how rare it is to come across a bird carcass that isn’t just a pile of feathers. Could taphonomy explain the rarity of sea otters? Carcass drifting experiments using… car tires, in the 1990s, showed that they modeled the drifting behavior of sea otters quite well. Sea otters tend to float if they die at the surface, owing to large lungs. Sea otter carcasses typically float for up to six weeks – which, surprisingly, is just as long, if not slightly longer, than harbor seals and dolphins observed by Willhelm Schafer in the North Sea. What does this extreme floating v. body mass ratio mean? Probably several things:
1) Because sea otters don’t exhale when they dive, and do not dive deep, this could make the discovery of complete skeletons very rare, as most end up on shore rather than sinking.
2) Because sea otters live so close to shore, most carcasses are probably going to end up drifting towards the shore at some point. Indeed, carcass and dummy drift experiments have 2/3 of each washing up on shore. The shoreline environment is one of the highest energy marine environments, and preservation of marine vertebrates in any meaningful volume is rare: only a handful of vertebrate fossil sites have ever been demonstrated to really represent this environment, and most rich assemblages of marine mammals represent deposition in at least 10 meters water depth. Virtually all stranded carcasses will not enter the fossil record except as unrecognizable bone pebbles and pulverized sand-size particles. It is for this reason I am utterly skeptical of the utility of many studies of taphonomic patterns of stranded carcasses. Stranded carcasses also give us meaningless data on disarticulation, because continually floating carcasses never undergo drying of the tissues, but that’s another problem.

Sea otter carcass and car tire drift experiments - Young et al. 2019.
3) Floating carcasses have the opportunity to shed isolated elements, particularly from the extremities, as they disarticulate – if they have enough time to decompose enough.
4) The distance of transport and the likelihood of stranding depends entirely upon currents and wind direction, which varies seasonally and daily. This is likely why 1/3 of the carcasses from the experiment never stranded, and why some drifted 100-200 km, which is still quite far. This drift distance casts doubt on ever being able to infer habitat preference from the fossils, as one carcass can, in its post-mortem road trip, cross virtually ever environmental boundary on the steep, narrow California shelf. Any discoveries of sea otter bones and teeth in rocky shore environments may be completely accidental.
5) Lastly, I’m not sure if comparable carcass drift experiments with larger seals and sea lions exist – but I expect them to differ little. The larger a marine mammal is, the higher the capacity for long-distance carcass transport. Sea otter drift patterns mean that it’s possible for partial skeletons to sink after the ‘bag of bones’ stage of bloat and float down into middle shelf sediments, where they are less likely to be scoured and separated by bottom currents. So why are most of our sea otter fossils from shallow settings adjacent to rocky shore environments?


Rocky shore environments, like the Monterey headlands, are characterized by erosion rather than deposition - which heavily biases the rock record and fossil record against rocky shore faunas, and since most marine mammals from the eastern North Pacific are found in these scattered deposits - their remains are often quite poorly preserved. Photo by RWB - the famous Lone Cypress on 17 mile drive in Pebble Beach, CA.
There are precious few pre-Pleistocene rocky shore faunas on the west coast: this is because rocky shore fossil assemblages are deposited as geographically limited lenses around sea stacks or other rocky exposures. These rocky exposures indicate the long-term likelihood of erosional destruction. Therefore, most rocky shore faunas from California, for example, probably have a short shelf life of 1-2 million years. True marine deposits formed by basin subsidence, rather than resistant bathtub rings around bedrock, are frequently thicker and more laterally extensive – but also generally terminate about 2 million years ago, when the California coast ranges began to be uplifted and all of the large shallow marine embayments dried up (now the SF Bay area, the Salinas river valley, the LA basin, and others). Two notable exceptions are the Port Orford Formation of Oregon, which is middle Pleistocene, and the upper part of the Merced Formation near San Francisco, which is middle Pleistocene in age (lower Merced is late Pliocene). It is possible that fossils of Enhydra will be found in Pliocene shelf deposits in California or Japan – after all, we assumed the same thing about monachine seals, until my good friends Jorge Velez-Juarbe and Anita “Phocita” Valenzuela-Toro (2019) reported a couple of monachine seal teeth from the Monterey Formation of Orange County, CA. So, it’s possible – but the evidence just isn’t there yet.
So what makes fossil sea otters rare, in my opinion? I’m not sure genuine scarcity has anything to do with it, and I am always hesitant to ascribe any paleoecological reasons, as dead animals float around all over the place and cross these convenient ecological boundaries rapidly after expiring (and, relative to body mass, sea otters take this to an extreme). Do sea otters have high preservation potential? Certainly it’s not much lower than that of pinnipeds, as their bones are still large, but smaller and perhaps slightly more easily abraded than seal and sea lion bones. We also have no shortage of tiny pinniped and dolphin skeletons in the rock record. Their preservation potential has to be much higher than sea birds – however, sea birds actually have a surprisingly high preservation potential, and are remarkably common fossils in Neogene marine deposits (even at places like Moonstone Beach – bird bones outnumber marine mammal bones by 10:1). So, maybe sea otters are rare – but there’s so much in terms of unknown variables I will hesitate for a long time before ever suggesting that as a viable hypothesis. In sum, I do not think there is enough that is fundamentally different in terms of anatomy or ecology, either from numerically common sea birds or small fur seals, that might explain the rarity of fossil sea otters.
Rather, I think it is an artifact of rock bias: there is a fundamental disconnect between the rich open shelf deposits of the Miocene/Pliocene and the rocky shore bathtub rings of the Pleistocene: the Pleistocene deposits are small in volume, geographically disparate, with poor (and rapidly shrinking) exposures. They are also generally terrace deposits that do not benefit from the typical sedimentological processes that concentrate vertebrate fossils in open shelf environments. Because 1) there is this difference in the abundance of marine mammal fossils between Pliocene and Pleistocene deposits owing to sedimentological factors, 2) difference in the volume of rock and area of exposure between these two epochs, and 3) sea otters are Pleistocene-only in the Pacific, sea otter fossils are rare. If we had open shelf deposits with preservation/sedimentology more similar to Neogene deposits like the Purisima and San Diego Formation, there would probably be more fossils of Enhydra on the west coast.* In conclusion, while rock bias cannot on its own explain the lack of pre-Pleistocene sea otters (bloat and float would have introduced at least a few sea otters into units like the San Diego Formation), sea otters invaded at a time when virtually all relevant deposits are scattered and limited in volume. So there are scraps instead of skeletons (unlike the Pliocene record of marine carnivores).
*”But what about Enhydritherium?” I hear someone moaning somewhere in the distance. Enhydritherium is Pliocene and therefore should be found in Pliocene marine deposits more frequently. Do recall that this species is probably not open marine and is probably freshwater-estuarine in distribution and therefore is not a good analog.

When did tool use evolve? We don’t really know, since there aren’t really many skeletal adaptations other than tiny forelimb size that correspond to tool use. The modern clawless otters are very dexterous, but do not use tools, and have river otter like limb proportions – suggesting that the bizarrely tiny forelimbs of Enhydra are a reasonable skeletal correlate. Enhydritherium is one of the only proposed Enhydra relatives with good postcrania, but it has river otter-like fore/hindlimb proportions. We don’t have much in the way of postcrania of Enhydriodon that is informative. There are isolated humeri from southern California of middle and late Pleistocene age that are anatomically identical to modern Enhydra lutris, and which Mitchell (1966) referred to the extant species. This would at minimum suggest – if the humeri are identical in size (difficult to evaluate owing to the fact that these are isolated elements) – that tiny forelimbs have been present in the sea otter lineage for a few hundred thousand years.

Who filled the otter niche before the Pleistocene? The modern kelp forest ecosystem probably originated in the late Miocene (Estes and Steinberg, 1988) - and today, sea otters are a keystone species: without otters, sea urchin populations get out of control and raze most of the kelp forest to the ocean floor. These "urchin barrens" now dominate rocky coasts between Monterey and British Columbia. The purple urchin, Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, is one of the most distinctive west coast marine invertebrates, and has a voracious appetite for kelp. This species is known from the Pliocene San Diego Formation, and certainly pre-dates Enhydra. So who ate urchins and kept their populations down before the arrival of sea otters? Sheepshead wrasses (Semicossyphus pulchrer) eat them - and have a fossil record in California extending *probably* back to the late Miocene owing to abundant tooth plates found in the Santa Margarita Sandstone. Annarichthys - the horrifying but very gentle and shy wolf eel - feeds on urchins, and is known from the Purisima Formation. Some sea stars (with admittedly a very limited fossil record on the west coast) feed on them. Would some of the extinct walruses have filled the niche of sea otters? Modern walrus occasionally feed on urchins, but they are probably second rate food consumed when more favorable mollusks are not available (Sheffield, 1997).  My money is on durophagous fish - but more research is clearly needed on the evolution of rocky the shore fauna and flora!
*This species has extra relevance to my family. My mom told us of her first field trip as a grade school student (St. Gregory's in San Mateo) to the Fitzgerald Marine Preserve in Moss Beach CA - indeed my first tidepool I ever visited - which was cancelled about 10 minutes after arrival because class idiot "Patrick R" stuck his tongue into a purple urchin and it became so swollen he couldn't breathe. Patrick had earlier gotten his head stuck in a chair during class.


Otter tool use leaves distinctive patterns of breakage on mussel shells - from Haslam et al. 2019.

Will we ever find sea otter tools in the fossil record? My guess is, probably not. There's one paper out there documenting what sea otter anvil stones and accumulations around them look like - but the odds of finding one in a rocky shore deposit are staggeringly tiny in my opinion. What is far more likely is looking at the distinctive patterns of breakage of different species of mollusks, like Haslam et al. (2019) did, and looking for those same patterns of breakage in the fossil record. This might even turn up more of a record than actual sea otter bones, since there are many more Pleistocene rocky shore deposits that completely lack vertebrates than there are that preserve them. As for the rocks that sea otters bring along with them? As discussed in part 1, it's not clear that the whole "sea otters carry around their favorite rock!" claim is more than a popular factoid, and doesn't seem to have a basis in scientific observation. We don't know how long sea otters carry their hammer stones around, or if the banging leaves any observable traces on them; indeed, it's not even clear if the anvil stones would be recognizable either without observation of otters using them. So, I don't think we'll be able to have a sea otter technology 'parataxonomy' like the "Oldowan" technology in the east African rift valley for early humans just quite yet.

When exactly did otters arrive in the Pacific? The lack of well-sampled early Pleistocene deposits in the eastern North Pacific precludes a precise estimation. We know it was sometime before 600,000-700,000 years ago, unless the Thornton Beach sea otter is the very first individual. However, we’re pretty certain that it was after the Plio-Pleistocene boundary 2.5 million years ago, since no sea otters (Enhydra spp) have ever been found in densely sampled units like the Purisima and San Diego formations. I predict that by the time I retire, zero fossils of Enhydra will be discovered in Pliocene rocks of the Pacific coast, and will happily eat my hat if this prediction turns out to be wrong.

Which lineage of freshwater otters did Enhydra evolve from? This is going to require more skulls of Enhydriodon and a significantly expanded morphological matrix for otters, in concert with molecular data in a combined analysis. I’m not interested in doing this, as to be honest, I really only care about sea otters and aside from them being adorable, don’t really give two shits about the phylogeny of river otters. But, someone will have to: right now our only ‘good’ phylogeny has about two dozen species and only 40ish morphological characters, with lots of uncertainty (Wang et al., 2017). The Wang et al. matrix is a fantastic start, don’t get me wrong – and it does hint at Enhydriodon-affinities of Enhydra, and casts doubt on an origin from Enhydritherium in North America.

The Future
1) We really need more fossil otters. Future exploration of latest Pliocene and Pleistocene (early, middle, and late) units, especially near Los Angeles, the Channel Islands, the Merced Formation near San Francisco, the Humboldt County localities, southwestern Oregon, and the Gubik Formation of Alaska will produce more otter material. More fossils will help with further clarifying the geochronologic range of Enhydra, and hopefully add to the hypodigm of Enhydra macrodonta, and perhaps reveal the existence of other species in the Plio-Pleistocene transition. We also need to be creative and reach out more to amateur collectors in northern California and Oregon who may have already collected some fossil otter material; thus far I’ve been pretty secretive about my otter research for various reasons, but I think getting the word out about how little we know about fossil sea otters, and what we *think* is going on, is a better course of action. We also need to go out and explore more Pleistocene marine mammal localities; the San Pedro Sand and Palos Verdes Sand near LA have been explored *somewhat* but there is undoubtedly more that can be done, provided there are surviving outcrops. We’re down to one major locality left (Moonstone Beach) in Humboldt County since Crannell Junction was overgrown in the 1980s, and it’s smaller than it used to be. Another option further south needing more field exploration is the Santa Barbara Formation – which is very well-exposed near Coal Oil Point in Isla Vista, a site I haven’t visited since I was in High School. There are some marine mammal scraps from that locality, and I think seasonal visits by some of my colleagues in Southern California could turn up some precious Pleistocene marine mammal material.
2) A reevaluation of Enhydra macrodonta is needed, including description of referable specimens from the same locality. This is a planned study with Ash Poust for the near future.
3) An interesting partial skull of Enhydra (identified in 1983 by Repenning as E. lutris), from the Gubik Pliocene-Pleistocene Formation of Alaska, awaits description – and is currently under study by yours truly, with assistance from Ash Poust, Morgan Churchill, and invertebrate paleontologist Chuck Powell. I won’t spoil it, but some aspects of it are pretty exciting (for example, sea otters cannot inhabit the Arctic ocean today because of the sea ice).
4) A more exhaustive phylogenetic analysis of lutrines is desirable, but this may be too much of an ask.

5) Granting agencies really need to be more supportive of field-based paleontology that doesn’t involve looking for dinosaurs in places we’ve found them for over 100 years.

References
Repenning, 1976. Repenning, 1976. C. A. Repenning. 1976. Enhydra and Enhydriodon from the Pacific Coast of North America. Journal of Research of the United States Geological Survey 4(3):305-315.

Friday, June 26, 2020

Photogrammetry turntable backgrounds - free to use

This week I successfully tested out some photogrammetry backgrounds - these are intended for use in photogrammetry of small objects that can be placed on a small turntable. In my method of photogrammetry, I use the background to help match points within a photo set. As explained in my long post on photogrammetry, you can either delete the background from every photo (extremely difficult), try and use a white featureless background and overexpose the image (very difficult), or manage to use a different background in each set of photos. For large objects you can do side A and side B in two different locations (e.g. two different rooms), thereby forcing the software to match points only on the object. If you take two photosets of different sides of the same object on the same tabletop, the software will match points on the tabletop and you'll have a failed model.

In this case, if you fill the frame of the camera with these turntable backgrounds, and put the object in a different orientation for each background, it's the same effect as moving a larger fossil to different locations: the software is fooled into matching points only on the fossil. See the photogrammetry post for more information. Here are the files below - scale them, and print them to the diameter of the turntable you have.  You can make your own as well - just make sure you have zero repeating patterns or symbols! I made these in a couple of hours in Adobe Illustrator. 

Go forth and make some great 3D models!



Tuesday, June 9, 2020

The terrible fossil record of sea otters, part 2: un-fantastic otter fossils and where to find them

Make sure to take a look at part 1, where I summarized what we know about modern sea otter anatomy, behavior, geography, and molecular phylogeny.





And when you're done, you can find the gripping conclusion here in part 2.


Introduction

This post is organized into two sections: the first is a mostly comprehensive summary of the study of fossils of Enhydra-like otter fossils (Enhydrini) in mostly chronological order. The second part goes into my own field excursions in search of fossil sea otters. The last post in this series will discuss what we can tell from the fossil record about the evolution, diversity, paleoecology, and paleogeography of extinct sea otters and the recent evolutionary history of the modern sea otter.




The distinctive but unspectacular holotype molar of Enhydra reevei, from Mitchell (1966).


Enhydra reevei – the first fossil sea otter
                An isolated tooth from Plio-Pleistocene “rocks” in Suffolk, UK, was named Lutra reevei by Newton (1890) and later recombined as Enhydriodon reevei. Enhydra reevei is very fragmentary, but uniquely share with Enhydra lutris completely rounded cusps and a complete lack of any crests or ridges on its teeth. All other lutrines, including Enhydriodon and Enhydritherium, possess some sharp cusps and deep pits. A second tooth was discovered later and reported by Willemsen (1990).


The horrifying skull of the "bear otter" Enhydriodon dikikae, from Geraads et al. 2007.


Femora of giant extinct African otters (Enhydriodon?) compared with Enhydra
modified from Lewis (2008).

Enhydriodon – the old world giant otters
                Several species of Enhydriodon have been named – giant otters, some exceeding the size of Enhydra, from Europe, Africa, and India. Most are known only from jaw fragments or isolated postcrania. These were among the earliest Enhydra-like otters discovered in the fossil record, and all are late Miocene or Pliocene in age. The “bear otter” Enhydriodon dikikae was reported recently from the Pliocene (3.3-3.5 Ma) of the Awash Valley in Ethiopia, and titanic otter femora of uncertain affinities (perhaps belonging to this taxon) have also been reported rocks of the same age in the Omo valley of Ethiopia (Lewis, 2008). The femora preserve Enhydra-like aquatic adaptations, perhaps suggesting a less terrestrial existence than most nonmarine otters, likely encouraged by how much more wet and lush subsaharan Africa was during the Pliocene. This gigantic otter was probably 2 meters in length and had a massive, thickened skull approximately the size of a black bear.


The entirety of the southern California sea otter record (all Enhydra lutris
as reported by Mitchell, 1966.

Enhydra lutris from southern California
                A number of bones, mostly postcrania, were reported by Ed Mitchell in 1966 from Los Angeles county and the Channel Islands. Most of these were from various deposits of middle and Pleistocene age like the San Pedro Sand (500,000-200,000 years) or the Palos Verdes Sand (130,000-85,000 years). One tooth, however, was from the Timms Point Silt – which Mitchell thought at the time was Pliocene (we'll get back to the Timms Point Silt in Part 3). So, he discounted the tooth of Enhydra reevei as being a genuine sea otter because his southern California specimen was supposedly much older, thereby indicating a North Pacific origin for Enhydra. At the time this specimen was the oldest known Enhydra fossil worldwide. This was reinforced by the discovery of some very fragmentary specimens (a tooth and a fragmentary mandible, one from Kettleman Hills in the San Joaquin valley of California and the other from the San Mateo Formation of San Diego County, California) about ten years later, which Charles Repenning initially identified as Enhydriodon, and later reidentified as Enhydritherium.


The holotype mandibles of Enhydra macrodonta (A, C, D) and modern Enhydra lutris (B), from Kilmer (1972). You can really appreciate how much larger the molars of the extinct species are!

Enhydra macrodonta – the big-toothed sea otter
                Only a few years later (1972), an unusually informative sea otter was discovered at the Crannell Junction locality in Humboldt County, just about a mile south of Moonstone Beach. This locality was an old dumping site for Cal Trans, and there used to be a nice exposure of the “Moonstone Beach Formation” (still not formally recognized), which is middle Pleistocene in age, and likely to be about 500,000-700,000 years old. This fossil consisted of a pair of well-preserved mandibles stuck inside a soft clayey nodule; the teeth were proportionally wider than modern Enhydra lutris, and so it was named Enhydra macrodonta. The holotype, supposedly in the geological collection at the Geology Department at Humboldt State University, was not given a number, and upon my visit in 2008, was not labeled, and one of the mandibles was missing without explanation (nor did anyone in the department seem to know that such a critical fossil was in their care). As a matter of fact, owing to a label from a different fossil, I thought this was a second specimen, until reexamining photos during my Ph.D. I matched it with the less complete of the two holotype mandibles. According to Dr. Frank Kilmer, the collector demanded that the school return the fossil to her, which the school obliged - despite already being published (albeit uncatalogued) as a type specimen. Kilmer was under the impression that both mandibles were returned, yet somehow one of them ended up back at HSU. The whereabouts of the better mandible are unknown, as the collector’s identity is also unknown. It was, however, known only by a former invertebrate paleontologist turned barkeeper in Arcata, California, who would not return any of my phone calls. A partial cast of this missing mandible is preserved at UCMP, found among the fossils that were on loan to Repenning at the time of his murder in 2005 – but not specifically labeled as such.


The remaining left mandible of the holotype of Enhydra macrodonta, as I discovered it hiding, unlabeled, at Humboldt State University in 2008. Because 1) Kilmer (1972) only figured the left mandible in dorsal view, 2) the specimen had a label implying it was from a different locality, and 3) Kilmer wrote to me indicating that both mandibles were returned to the collector, it took me about five years to realize that this was in fact the left mandible of the holotype and not a second specimen.

Regardless of the strange history of the type specimen, it has made its way to the collections at UCMP (Berkeley) along with a bunch of other fossils I hand picked for salvage about ten years ago – many thanks to Dr. Pat Holroyd for managing the transfer, picking up the fossils, and getting them curated at UCMP. The remaining holotype mandible (and other referable specimens) will be under study in the future by Ash Poust (SDNHM) and myself. The uncertainty regarding the fate of these fossils gave me no shortage of anxiety over the course of my graduate and doctoral programs.

A femur of Enhydra sp., and possibly Enhydra macrodonta, from the middle Pleistocene Port Orford Formation of Oregon, reported by Leffler (1964).

                What do we know about Enhydra macrodonta? Not much, unfortunately. It’s got big teeth, it’s about the same size as Enhydra lutris, and is from the late middle Pleistocene. It may have had a higher bite force owing to the larger teeth, and perhaps a greater capacity for durophagy. But we know nothing about its skull, and scattered postcrania have not yet been analyzed. A couple of femora of Enhydra sp. were discovered in the 1960s and 1970s from rocks of the same age at Cape Blanco, Oregon, though only one has been described. These fossils have been widely misinterpreted as being Pliocene in age by careless researchers.


The California "Enhydriodon" mandible reported by Repenning (1976) with bona fide European Enhydriodon and Enhydra teeth for comparison. I've left the original caption in place. 

Enhydriodon from California?
A few scattered Pliocene otter specimens from California, originally identified as Enhydriodon (later identified as Enhydritherium). These were reported in the late 70s by Repenning, and reinforced Mitchell’s (1966) hypothesis that Enhydra-like otters have been living continuously along the Pacific coast over the past 5-6 million years, and had evolved in situ within the Pacific (see above). Repenning later revised this upon study of newly discovered sea otter fossils from Alaska (see below). 


A fossil Enhydra mandible fragment from the Gubik Formation of Alaska. Don't get too excited: the crappy mandible is the fossil! The complete one is a modern one with all the teeth pulled out. 3 is an impression of the molar roots of Enhydriodon lluecai, and 4 is the molar of Enhydra reevei, and 5 is a modern Enhydra molar. From Repenning (1983).

Scattered Enhydra fragments from Alaska
                The Gubik Formation on the North Slope of Alaska is Pliocene and Pleistocene in age, and consists of a series of transgressive deposits made during sea level highstands corresponding to interglacial periods. Each member of the Gubik represents a different highstand, and since the unit covers about 3 million years of geologic time, knowing only the formation name is supremely unhelpful for biochronologic purposes. A number of scattered specimens have been reported from the Gubik Formation (Repenning, 1983), including a fragmentary mandible with well-preserved lower molar alveoli. These alveoli are narrower than what you see in modern Enhydra lutris, and Repenning interpreted this latest Pliocene or earliest Pleistocene mandible a belonging to a primitive species of Enhydra that was close to Enhydriodon. The alveolar morphology also corresponds closely to that of Enhydriodon lluecai from the Pliocene of Spain. Repenning further speculated that the somewhat more gracile mandible of this Enhydra sp. from Alaska could correspond to the narrower molar of Enhydra reevei. Repenning, in the same paper, suggested his 1976 interpretation of in-situ evolution in the North Pacific from Enhydritherium could be in error, and that a dispersal from a European ancestor (e.g. Enhydra reevei) was plausible.


I'm currently working on describing the sea otter skull from Walakpa Bay, Alaska, with Ash Poust, Morgan Churchill, and Chuck Powell.

Repenning also mentioned a partial skull of Enhydra from younger middle Pleistocene strata of the Gubik Formation, which he considered to represent the modern species. I first saw it in 2006 while browsing the California Academy of Sciences marine mammal fossil collection while they were still at the temporary downtown facility, and the late Curator Jean Demouthe dismissed the fossil as “just some late Pleistocene crap” and showed me some cetacean material. (The more I think about it the more I laugh; Jean was abrasive and formidable, and when I returned from NZ with my Ph.D. in hand she treated me very differently. She wasn’t for everybody, but liked her, and I do miss her.) Being 21 years old and naiive, I quickly agreed with her and moved on. It wasn’t for another year or so that I realized the importance of the fossil – since it’s apparently the only fossil cranium of Enhydra discovered anywhere. I have the specimen on loan now, and while I won’t divulge any of our team’s secrets, I will confirm that it is not Enhydra lutris, and we’re pretty excited about the implications of this fossil.





Skulls and mandibles of Enhydritherium terraenovae from the early Pliocene of Florida, from Berta and Morgan (1986) and FLMNH.

Enhyditherium – the red herring from Florida
                In 1985 a new genus of lutrine was named from the early Pliocene of Florida by Annalisa Berta and Gary Morgan – Enhydritherium terraenovae. This somewhat altered existing hypotheses of sea otter evolution and biogeography, as it was proposed to be the immediate sister taxon of Enhydra – therefore suggesting a North American origin for Enhydra, rather than a European origin from Enhydriodon. Additional specimens were reported from the west coast (in actuality originally referred to Enhydriodon by Repenning, and reidentified as Enhydritherium by Berta and Morgan). Enhydritherium was hypothesized to be an Enhydra-sized sea otter with a somewhat more river-otter like dentition.
                More completely preserved remains of Enhydritherium, including a pretty nice skeleton, were reported from Florida by Lambert (1997) – and still represents one of, if not the, most completely preserved fossil lutrines. He did not conduct a phylogenetic analysis, but noted that many of the localities where it had been found since 1986 had little marine influence, and he indicated that Enhydritherium was probably marine tolerant but not a marine specialist. In terms of feeding ecology, Enhydritherium most likely consumed a less mollusk-rich diet than Enhydra and was probably more reliant upon fish: Enhydritherium lacks the tiny forearms of Enhydra and is proportioned more like ‘normal’ lutrines. Regardless, in the absence of a cladistic analysis, evolution of Enhydra from an Enhydritherium-like ancestor in North America was the state of the science when I started researching sea otters over a decade ago.


An Enhydritherium mandible from the Pliocene of central Mexico, from Tseng et al. 2017.

                Subsequent discoveries and analyses have confirmed that Enhydritherium lived far within the continental interior, being discovered in terrestrial deposits in north central Mexico. Phylogenetic analysis by Wang et al. (2017) also seems to indicate that there is not a close relationship between Enhydra and Enhydritherium – the latter seems to some otters from the Miocene of Italy, and in one of their analyses, there seems instead to be support for a link between Enhydriodon and Enhydra. For these reasons, consideration of Enhydritherium
as a close relative or possible ancestor of Enhydra has been a 30 year long red herring.


The rugged, beautiful, and often foggy and eternally unforgiving coast of Humboldt County, California.

My desperate and minimally fruitful search for fossil sea otters in the Pacific Northwest
                It took me about 3-4 years of collecting Pliocene marine mammal fossils before I became wise to the fact that I had never found, nor heard of, a fossil sea otter from the Purisima Formation in northern California – despite preserving all manner of other modern marine mammal genera (Callorhinus, Tursiops, Phocoena, Balaenoptera, Eubalaena, among others). When I asked other paleontologists, they either shrugged (“I hadn’t really thought about it” or “We don’t find them in this other Pliocene unit either…”) or referred me back to Repenning’s paper and the Berta and Morgan (1986) papers. But, none of those are Enhydra proper. Where were the actual Enhydra fossils? They show up in Holocene middens and scattered late and middle Pleistocene deposits, but not a shred of evidence from the embarrassingly well-sampled San Diego Formation of southern California. I spent the following ten years searching the Purisima Formation near Santa Cruz and Half Moon Bay for unusual fossils and not once did I turn up any marine carnivore fossils that were not from fur seals or walruses.
                What do you do when you want to find something rare? Go and look where other people have found them! I spent a number of field trips, chiefly on a huge detour through Oregon on my many road trips to/from California and Montana at the beginning and end of summer break from MSU, visiting a handful of otter-bearing localities in Humboldt County, California, and Curry county, Oregon, chiefly of middle Pleistocene age. These visits were mostly from Summer 2007 to 2011, and have not been back since. On one trip, I spent three days in Humboldt County by myself staying at a KOA Kampground Kabin (yes, they’re really dedicated to naming everything with a K) and a Motel 6 in Arcata, scouting out all these different localities in a less frenzied fashion then before, where I thought “I still have a six hour drive to get home to San Francisco tonight…”. Quick story: I am a super light sleeper, and while the KOA cabin was great, my neighbors at the Motel 6 were a loud trailer trash family whose kids would start giggling every 30-40 minutes and the dad would yell “goddamnit I told you to shut the fuck up” a couple of times. It was super effective! And by effective, I mean it wasn’t, because I looked at my watch and saw it was 6:20 in the morning and I hadn’t slept a wink. It was because of this insomnia that I eventually cut this trip short.


Ash Poust and Lee Hall looking for Pleistocene mammal fossils at Moonstone Beach in Humboldt County. That was a very long, damp day.

                My first time looking for otters was a stop on a big road trip in 2008 to the Moonstone Beach locality. It is hard to find, as the trail is not visible from the beach; you need to spot a 3 foot section of overgrown trail from the beach, make it up 15 feet of slipper algae covered rocks in between waves, and then wind your way up a 100’ tall hill to a 20 foot tall, 150 foot long cliff that is invisible from the beach as well. On my first visit, in 2007 I believe, I could not find the trail and I did not make it to the locality. The abundance of poison oak killed my interest in exploring or hacking my way through the undergrowth. However, I planned things out better for my summer 2008 visit, got in touch with a fossil collector who had donated many significant finds in the area (Ron Bushell), who explained how to find it. I’ve visited it three or four times since, and mostly just found fish bones, a crumby deer astragalus, and a fragment of a probable cormorant humerus – but no marine mammal fossils.
                The next day on the same trip in 2008, I tried a locality about 100 yards away and higher up section that was a little road cut. Invertebrate paleontologists (Zullo, Durham, Wolfe) had collected a partial harbor seal mandible and a giant ground sloth claw core from the locality back in the 70s, so I thought it might produce some sea otters. I wasn’t wrong: after about a half hour of looking, I found a beautifully preserved upper molar of Enhydra macrodonta! The only known upper molar for the species, as it happens. So I bagged up about 200 lbs of gravelly matrix and brought them down to my car in the hopes of finding some more teeth or bones. By this point I had run out of water and desperately needed lunch: it was a rare week where the sun was shining every day by 10am – Humboldt County is usually bathed in perpetual fog. Make no mistake though – I get pretty overheated doing fieldwork if its 65F and sunny out. I am really used to, and built for, field paleontology on the foggy coast. By the time I drove my little Honda down to the beach to wet-screen all the matrix, I had a pounding headache. So I ate my lunch, popped some advil, and napped in the shade on the beach behind a large boulder. After a couple hours I felt better and started screening. I didn’t find a fucking thing. Just rocks and roots.


Crannell Junction in the 1970s, when the exposure still existed, compared to the past few years, where there is a fully forested hillside instead. 


Camel rock on two different days, from slightly different vantage points. The tide variation is so extreme that you would never know there's a sand bar you can walk on most of the way - but it's only exposed a few times a year.


The tiny little fissure-fill like remnant of Moonstone Beach Formation exposed out at Camel Rock.


The cave through Camel Rock.

                I also tried visiting two other nearby localities where otter material has turned up. I visited the Crannell Junction site, and it is difficult to imagine that there ever was bare rock exposed here: the hillside is fully vegetated and studded with 30-40 foot tall trees! I pulled up in my car, looked around for about 10 minutes, and concluded the spot hadn’t had any rock exposed since at least the 1980s based on the size of the trees – and the fact that Ron Bushell had never collected there since he began in the 1990s. The other locality is called Camel Rock (also called Little River Rock, and there is a second spot called Camel rock further north), and is a large sea stack with two humps (hence the name); between the humps is about a 5 meter wide wedge of Moonstone Beach Formation shelly sandstone that was deposited between the two humps when they were just submarine rock outcroppings. Getting there is extremely difficult, and my story is a bit like something out of the 1980s adventure movie The Goonies. It sits nearly 400 meters from the high tide line on shore, and is accessible only during extremely low spring tides, or by boat: but the waves are generally too large for a craft under ten feet long, and the rocks are too sharp for an inflatable. There is a sand bar you can walk on, but it is difficult to follow, and it is rarely ever exposed – you kind of have to just wade through the frigid water and read the waves. The water isn’t clear, and there are tons of enticing boulders that *look* like you can climb on and hop from boulder to boulder. However, there are deep channels scoured out around these; I doubted the waves, and walked towards one of these boulders, and fell into a channel up to my waist (my cell phone and camera were inside a waterproof box). I decided to follow where the waves seemed shallow, and indeed – the water was only knee deep. I had about an hour until low tide, giving me a two hour window. I finally made it across the submerged sand bar, and now had about 50 yards of climbing over slippery algae and barnacle covered boulders (a perpetual hazard in my west coast fieldwork: slip on the algae, cut yourself up on the razor-sharp barnacles). Once I reached the base of the sea stack, to my dismay I realized that there were no exposures accessible from the ground – the deposit was shaped like a V, at least ten feet above my head. And the rocks are all super slippery, and impossible to climb. I was extremely disappointed. I began to pack up and turn around – the beach seemed so far away, and I grew anxious about the tide – is it rising? Am I going to get stuck out here? And then I saw light – literally – there was a cave, underneath the saddle in between the two humps! I crawled underneath, and I was on the other side of the island! I climbed up some grass, spooked a bunch of sea gulls, and found a very small exposure at the top of the saddle; some fossilized fish bones, and a marine mammal rib fragment, were sitting out, mixed with modern fish bones left by the gulls. I also found a gull nest – and let me tell you, gull chicks look like little black and white spotted dalmatian puppies. They were SO CUTE. I’m not sure what the permitting process is like for these sea stacks, so I didn’t collect anything, and decided against coming back; the outcrop is so small, the odds of finding something there are so small relative to Moonstone Beach, and the locality is so dangerous and difficult to access, that it’s just not worth it.


Ash Poust (left) and Lee hall (right) searching for middle Pleistocene marine mammals in the Port Orford Formation in coastal Oregon in 2009.


                I spent another few trips over the next three years, and didn’t turn up much more than scraps – aside from a beautiful mandible of the sea lion Proterozetes ulysses found by Ash Poust in Oregon (and published by us a few years ago – Poust and Boessenecker, 2017), and a couple of associated sea lion vertebrae encrusted with barnacles (same locality), which I published in Palaios in 2013. I spent a lot of time searching high and low for these damn otters, in some of the only places they had been reported from! Fossil otter remains are quite rare: famous collector Doug Emlong found only a single specimen from the Oregon locality. Most specimens collected by paleontologists are one-off examples where they got lucky; the only person to my knowledge, to find multiple sea otter fossils in their own lifespan, was Mr. Ron Bushell, who collected about a half dozen specimens from Moonstone Beach in the 90s. Ron would visit Moonstone Beach after it rained and he lived nearby in Eureka and could visit many times a year. No vertebrate paleontologists lived in Humboldt County, and aside from students and invertebrate paleontologists, there wasn’t really anyone out looking for them. That being said: I am absolutely certain that scientifically significant sea otter fossils from Moonstone Beach exist in private collections, awaiting scientific study if the collectors are willing to donate them. Also, thanks to the multiple grant funding agencies who have rejected my grant applications to look for more sea otters at these localities!

Further Reading
Berta and Morgan, 1985. https://www.jstor.org/stable/1304931
Repenning, 1976. C. A. Repenning. 1976. Enhydra and Enhydriodon from the Pacific Coast of North America. Journal of Research of the United States Geological Survey 4(3):305-315.
Willemsen, 1990. A new specimen of the otter Enhydra reevei (Newton, 1890) from the crag of Bramerton, Norfolk. Bulletin of the Geological Society of Norfolk, 39:87-90.