A new marine vertebrate assemblage from the Late Neogene Purisima Formation in Central California, part II: Pinnipeds and Cetaceans
Author
Boessenecker, Robert W.
text
Geodiversitas
2013
2013-12-31
35
4
815
940
http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.5252/g2013n4a5
journal article
6402
10.5252/g2013n4a5
fbfe438c-1eae-40cb-b56f-ff8167b283c2
1638-9395
4538200
cf.
Phocoena
REFERRED MATERIAL. — UCMP 219123, partial skull consisting part of right maxilla and premaxilla missing the anterior portion of the rostrum, antorbital process, and most of the ascending process of the maxilla, collected by R.W. Boessenecker from UCMP locality
V99833
.
STRATIGRAPHIC OCCURRENCE. — Middle part of the San Gregorio section of the Purisima Formation, Early Pliocene (
c.
5-3.35 Ma; Zanclean equivalent;
Fig. 2
).
DESCRIPTION
Anteriorly, the rostrum is dorsoventrally compressed with a flat dorsal surface (
Fig. 46
). Ŋe premaxilla
FIG. 45. — Reconstruction of skull (UCMP 219503) and mandible (UCMP 219076) of
Phocoenidae
unnamed genus 2:
A -C
, skull in lateral (
A
), dorsal (
B
) and ventral (
C
) views;
D
,
E
, mandible in lateral (
D
) and dorsal (
E
) views. Scale bar: 10 cm.
has parallel lateral and medial margins, and anteriorly, the premaxilla slopes slightly laterally. Medially, the premaxilla forms a sharp ridge along the dorsal margin of the mesorostral canal; posteriorly the medial surface is flat. Ŋe anteromedial sulcus is straight and runs posterolaterally from the margin of the mesorostral canal to the premaxillary foramen. Ŋe latter is positioned in the middle of the premaxilla anterior to the premaxillary eminence. Ŋe posteromedial sulcus is not apparent, and the posterolateral sulcus is developed lateral to the pre- maxillary foramen and extends posteriorly along the lateral margin of the premaxillary eminence; an additional posteromedial sulcus (
sensu
Murakami
et al.
2012b
) is not apparent. Ŋe prenarial triangle is bordered medially by the mesorostral canal and laterally by the anteromedial sulcus; it is composed of porous bone. Ŋe premaxillary eminence is elevated dorsally (
Fig. 46C
), dorsally convex in lateral aspect, and laterally convex in dorsal aspect (
Fig. 46A
). Ŋe eminence is anteroposteriorly short and laterally overhangs the maxilla; within this overhang is a small, laterally facing foramen in the premaxilla. Ŋere is a small indentation in the posteromedial corner of the premaxillary eminence, where the accessory exposure (= maxillary ossicle) of the maxilla was probably situated. Ŋe ascending process of the premaxilla is restricted to a small cone-shaped process extending posterolateral to the premaxillary eminence. Ŋis process dorsally overlaps the maxilla, and is short along the lateral side of the bony naris. Ŋe premaxilla/maxilla suture runs along the base of the premaxillary eminence. Ŋe dorsal surfaces of the maxilla of UCMP 219123 and ascending process of the maxilla are relatively flat (
Fig. 46C
). Although damaged, the rostrum clearly tapers anteriorly. Ŋe anteriormost dorsal infraorbital foramen occurs anterolateral to the premaxillary eminence and opens anteriorly. Ŋe palatal surface of the maxilla is transversely convex. A poorly preserved alveolar groove occurs adjacent to the lateral margin of the rostral portion of the maxilla.
FIG. 46.— Partial skull of cf.
Phocoena
(UCMP 219123):
A
, dorsal view;
B
, ventral view;
C
, right lateral view;
D
, interpretive line drawing in right lateral view;
E
, interpretive line drawing in dorsal view,with fossil mirrored. Gray shading on line drawing represents preserved portions, and dashed line represents unknown features. Scale bars: 3 cm.
COMPARISONS
Ŋis specimen exhibits many features identifying it as a phocoenid or true porpoise, including a well-developed premaxillary eminence and an ascending process of the premaxilla that does not extend posteriorly beyond the bony naris (
Fig. 46A
;
Barnes 1985a
). Ŋis specimen differs from other modern and fossil phocoenids in several ways. Although the premaxillary eminence is elevated in UCMP 219123 as in
Neophocaena phocoenoides
Cuvier, 1824
,
Phocoena phocoena
Linnaeus, 1758
,
Phocoena dioptrica
,
Phocoena sinus
Norris
& Mc- Farland, 1958, and
Phocoenoides dalli
, it is more elevated and more strongly dorsally convex than in
Archaeophocaena
Murakami, Shimada, Hikida & Hirano, 2012
,
Australithax
Muizon, 1988
,
Haborophocoena
,
Lomacetus
Muizon, 1986
,
Miophocaena
,
Numatophocoena
Ichishima & Kimura, 2000
,
Piscolithax
,
Pterophocaena
,
Salumiphocaena
Barnes, 1985
, and
Septemtriocetus
Lambert, 2008
. UCMP 219123 differs from
Pterophocaena
in possessing a narrower premaxillary eminence that does not widely overhang the ascending process of the maxilla. Ŋe laterally convex margin of the premaxillary eminence in this taxon is similar with
P. phocoena
,
Phocoena spinipinnis
Burmeister, 1865
,
P. dalli
and the Miocene porpoises
Archaeophocaena
and
Salumiphocoena
, while it is not as convex as in
N. phocoenoides
and
P. sinus
; all other fossil taxa exhibit a straight lateral margin (
Haborophocoena toyoshimai
,
Piscolithax
,
Septemtriocetus
) or an “angled” margin with a slight corner (
Australithax
,
Haborophocoena minutis
,
Lomacetus
,
Miophocaena
). UCMP 219123 differs from an undescribed broadheaded phocoenid from the San Diego Formation (SDNHM 38340) in its smaller size, and slightly convex palate. UCMP 219123 differs from
Archaeophocaena
,
Haborophocoena
, and
Miophocaena
in possessing a left premaxilla that terminates further anteriorly and near the anterolateral margin of the bony nares.
Phocoena dioptrica
also exhibits a relatively straight lateral margin of the premaxillary eminence. Additionally,
P. dalli
exhibits an exposure of the premaxilla lateral to the base of the eminence, as opposed to the suture running along the base as in UCMP 219123. In UCMP 219123, all extant species of
Phocoena
, and
Salumiphocaena
, the premaxillary eminence is anteroposteriorly short and dorsally highly convex; it is slightly longer in
Neophocaena
Palmer, 1899
and
Phocoenoides
, and much longer in all other fossil phocoenids. When eminence height is expressed as a percentage of anteroposterior length of the eminence, UCMP 219123 exhibits the most convex eminence at 37%, compared to 35% in
P. dioptrica
, 27% in
P. phocoena
, 25% in
P.spinipinnis
and
N. phocoenoides
, and 23% in
P. dalli
. Ŋe rostrum of
Neophocaena
is also dorsoventrally deeper than in UCMP 219123, in addition to possessing a transversely convex prenarial triangle, which is flat in UCMP 219123. Although incomplete, the morphology of the premaxilla and
supramastoid crest
FIG. 47. — Partial left squamosal of cf.
Physeteroidea
gen. et sp. indet. (UCMP 219108);
A
, lateral view;
B
, medial view;
C
, dorsal view. Scale bar: 3 cm.
maxilla agree most closely with extant porpoises (
Phocoena
,
Phocoenoides
, and
Neophocaena
). In particular, the short, wide, and dorsally and laterally convex premaxillary eminence suggests that this specimen belongs to the genus
Phocoena
; no other fossil or extant phocoenids exhibit such an anteroposteriorly short and dorsally convex premaxillary eminence. However, UCMP 219123 differs from extant phocoenids and
Miophocaena
in its apparent lack of additional posterolateral sulci (
sensu
Murakami
et al.
2012b
).
In UCMP 219123, as well as all other extant phocoenids and
Piscolithax
, the ascending process of the premaxilla is reduced to a small, cone shaped process that dorsally overlaps the maxilla. In
Archaeophocaena
,
H. toyoshimai
,
Miophocaena
,
Numatophocoena
, and crania of the
Haborophocoena
-like
Phocoenidae
unnamed genus 1 (UCMP 128285, 219504), the ascending process is formed instead as a transversely broad sheet that overlaps the maxilla (as in delphinids); in all other fossil phocoenids (
Australithax
,
H. minutis
,
Lomacetus
,
Salumiphocaena
, and
Phocoenidae
unnamed genus 2), the ascending process forms the anterior part of a cylindrical ridge that laterally borders the bony nares, the posterior part of which is formed by the maxilla. In this specimen, the rostral portion of the maxilla is relatively narrow, similar to
P.phocoena
,
Australithax
,
Septemtriocetus
,
H. minutis
, and
Lomacetus
. However, this differs from all other species of
Phocoena
,
Neophocaena
,
Phocoenoides
, as well as
Salumiphocaena
and
Piscolithax tedfordi
Barnes, 1984
, all of which have a maxilla that is much wider than the premaxilla on the rostrum. At the other extreme,
Haborophocoena toyoshimai
,
Piscolithax boreios
Barnes, 1984
, and
Piscolithax longirostris
have a rostral portion of the premaxilla that is wide and nearly wider than the maxilla on the rostrum. Ŋe small facet in the premaxillary eminence indicates that the accessory exposure of the maxilla (= maxillary ossicle) was small (although missing in UCMP 219123), like in most phocoenids (with the exception of
Lomacetus
, which had large and anteriorly extending maxillary ossicle). Lastly, unlike all extant phocoenids, UCMP 219123 exhibits a slightly convex palate, which also occurs in most fossil taxa; a convex palate appears to be plesiomorphic for phocoenids and delphinoids in general. In extant phocoenids, the palate at mid-rostrum is transversely flat or even slightly concave.
REMARKS
Ŋese comparisons suggest that UCMP 219123 is most phenetically similar to the extant harbor porpoise
P. phocoena
, and is identified as cf.
Phocoena
. Ŋis is the earliest fossil record of an extant phocoenid genus, and the first fossil record of an extant phocoenid from the eastern Pacific.Previously, fossils of extant phocoenid taxa have been reported only from the Pleistocene:
N. phocaenoides
from
Japan
(
Kimura & Hasegawa 2005
) and
P. phocoena
from Champlain Sea deposits (
Harington 1977
). Two additional
Phocoena
-like taxa are present in Upper Pliocene strata of California: an undescribed broad-headed phocoenid with spatulate teeth from the San Diego Formation (SDNHM 38340), and a small phocoenid with a convex palate and sulci on the premaxillary eminences (USNM 23885) from the Purisima Formation near Pillar Point (San Mateo County). Ŋis proposed Pliocene record of cf.
Phocoena
has implications for the timing of divergence of crown phocoenids.
Ŋe evolutionary biogeography of phocoenids was hypothesized by Fajardo-Mellor
et al.
(2006) as follows: 1) phocoenids originated in the eastern North Pacific; 2)
Neophocaena
and the common ancestor of the
Phocoena
-
Phocoenoides
clade dispersed into the southern hemisphere during the Pliocene (3-2 Ma; Piacenzian-Gelasian) following cooling caused by the closure of the
Panama
seaway; and 3) Pleistocene cooling allowed the ancestors of
Phocoena sinus
and the common ancestor of the
P. phocoena
-
P. dalli
clade to each disperse northwards into the North Pacific. Ŋe presence of an Early Pliocene (4.5-3.35 Ma; Zanclean-Piacenzian equivalent) record of cf.
Phocoena
suggests that the clade may have diverged by 4 Ma. Ŋe phylogenetic relationship of the southern hemisphere
P. spinipinnis
as sister to a
Phocoenoides
+
P. phocoena
clade (Fajardo-Mellor
et al.
2006) still supports a southern hemisphere origin for the common ancestor of these taxa, although it is possible that basal members of the entire
Phocoena
-
Phocoenoides
clade remained in the North Pacific during the Late Pliocene. More fossils are needed for further evaluation.