Updated list of the mammals of Costa Rica, with notes on recent taxonomic changes
Author
Mora, José Manuel
0000-0002-1200-1495
Department of Biology and Museum of Vertebrate Biology, Portland State University, Portland, Oregon 97207 - 0751, USA. jomora @ pdx. edu, josemora 07 @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 1200 - 1495 & Carrera de Gestión Ecoturística, Sede Central, Universidad Técnica Nacional, Alajuela, Costa Rica.
josemora07@gmail.com
Author
Ruedas, Luis A.
0000-0002-4746-4799
Department of Biology and Museum of Vertebrate Biology, Portland State University, Portland, Oregon 97207 - 0751, USA ruedas @ pdx. edu; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 4746 - 4799
ruedas@pdx.edu
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-10-20
5357
4
451
501
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5357.4.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5357.4.1
1175-5326
D80094AD-DD1D-4EDA-BFB6-8B453814FC46
Artiodactyla
and
Cetacea
Cetacea
no longer applies to an ordinal level taxon: all members of
Cetacea
currently are included within the order
Artiodactyla
.
Montgelard
et al
. (1997)
proposed the name “Cetartiodactyla” to reflect the growing body of data showing
Cetacea
nested within
Artiodactyla
. However, use of the name Cetartiodactyla has been controversial because
Cetacea
and
Artiodactyla
are not sister-taxa: molecular data distinctly show cetaceans embedded
within
Artiodactyla (Prothero
et al
. 2021)
. Exceptionally rapid and disparate evolution of the cetacean skull has obscured an accurate assessment of their phylogenetic relationships with other groups of mammals (
Goswami
et al
. 2022
). As a result, the initial—and apparently incongruous—assignment of
Cetacea
to
Artiodactyla
generally is ascribed to molecular data from amino acid and nucleotide sequence data (
Goodman
et al
. 1985
; Irwin
et al
. 1990;
Graur & Higgins 1994
), pinpointing
Hippopotamidae
as the sister taxon of
Cetacea (
Gatesy
et al
. 1996
)
. Paleontological evidence subsequently corroborated this relationship (
Gingerich
et al
. 1990
,
2001
;
Thewissen & Hussain 1993
;
Thewissen 1994
; Thewissen & Madar; 1999;
Thewissen
et al
. 2001
). Molecular data have provided increasing support and definition for these relationships (
Upham
et al
. 2019
;
McGowen
et al
. 2020
). However, the name and taxonomic rank of the group remains controversial.
A variety of propositions have been put forward to address this controversy. We noted Cetartiodactyla above, a name that has been recommended for disuse by Asher & Helgen (2010) and
Prothero
et al
. (2022)
for the ordinal group. An intraordinal alternative was proposed by
Waddell
et al
. (1999)
:
Whippomorpha
(“
wh
ales” plus “
hippo
s”), as the clade within
Artiodactyla
that includes
Hippopotamidae
and
Cetacea
. The same grouping subsequently was given the name Cetancodonta by Arnason
et al
. (2000, 2002, 2008). As pointed out by Asher & Helgen (2010) based on the principle of priority espoused by
Simpson (1945
; also see Art. 23 of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature), and regardless of the awkward construction of the name,
Whippomorpha
has temporal priority over Cetancodonta. However, as a “clade”, it is a descriptive appellation for a monophyletic subordinate group, and does not resolve the taxonomic level at which subordinate or superordinate groups may lie; in other words: the taxonomic level of “clade” is nebulous in this instance, besides defining a common ancestry, or circumscribing “delimitable monophyletic units” (
Huxley 1957
); in the present instance:
Hippopotamidae
and
Cetacea
. There are any number of such units in any region of the tree of life one may wish to examine, and a proliferation of names for such clades would serve little useful purpose;
Prothero
et al
. (2022:96)
correctly pointed out that “If one wishes to convey the fact that whales are artiodactyls, one can say informally “whales and other artiodactyls” or “whales and terrestrial artiodactyls””. More recently,
Whippomorpha
has been adopted as a subordinal level group (
Lewison 2011
).
Linnaeus described whales, dolphins, and their ilk, as the order
Cete
(
Linnaeus 1758:75
; also used by
Gray 1843
;
Bonaparte 1851
;
nec
Cete
sensu
Thewissen 1994
), but the currently accepted name (for the same group defined by Linnaeus) is
Cetacea
Brisson 1762:3
[first summary mention], 215 [unnumbered title page], 217 [diagnosis]. This name became accepted and since has come into widespread use (e.g.,
Gray 1821
[as a “Class”: “Cetaceae”, containing the order
Herbivoraae
(including
Manatidae
and
Dugongidae
, and Order
Carnivorae
, with families
Monodontidae
,
Physeteridae
, and Balanadae];
Lesson 1827
[as “Cétacées”];
Gray 1846
[as
Cetacea
, but with the same familial arrangement as in
Gray 1821
];
Brandt 1873
;
Lydekker 1887
;
Trouessart 1898
; etc.): all used
Cetacea
as an ordinal level taxon. The Committee on Taxonomy of The Society for Marine Mammalogy maintains a list of marine mammals and subspecies (https://marinemammalscience.org/science-and-publications/list-marinemammal-species-subspecies/; accessed
20 December 2022
) listing
Cetacea
as an infraorder within
Artiodactyla
, with Mysticeti and Odontoceti (no rank) and their currently accepted familial level taxa contained therein.
Cetacea
also has been used at the family level: Doherty (1864:138) used “Cetacidae” [sic] for “whales, etc.”. Doherty (1864) even went so far as to link Cetacidae, in the “Pachydermal Order” with “Pachydermidae” (hippopotamus), albeit containing as well
Tapiridae
and Proboscidae (tapirs and elephants). While Doherty’s philosophical taxonomic framework was somewhat heterodox, it was not unique and may have had its origins in similar philosophical propositions of
Swainson (1835)
.