Pliocene marine mammals from the Whalers Bluff Formation of Portland, Victoria, Australia
Author
Fitzgerald, Erich M. G.
text
Memoirs of Museum Victoria
2005
2005-12-31
62
1
67
89
https://museumsvictoria.com.au/collections-research/journals/memoirs-of-museum-victoria/volume-62-issue-1-2005/pages-67-89/
journal article
10.24199/j.mmv.2005.62.2
1447-2554
10665561
Family
Balaenidae
Gray, 1821
Genus and species indeterminate
Referred specimen
.
NMV
P218269, incomplete right periotic; anterior and superior processes virtually complete, but pars cochlearis almost entirely worn off, and only anteriormost base of posterior process preserved (
Fig. 3A
).
Description
. P218269 is highly polished and abraded. The anterior process is blunt and globose, being indistinct from the superior process. There is marked lateral exostosis of the superior process lateral to the epitympanic recess. The lateral aspect of the anterior process is rugose and pitted. Posteriorly, this pitting decreases in density. Only the lateralmost region of the pars cochlearis is preserved. In medial view, the most notable feature is the sulcus for the facial nerve (cr. VII), the course of cr. VII being preserved from its entry into the body of the periotic at the aperure of the internal facial foramen, to its ventral exit into the epitympanic cavity via the ventral facial foramen. All other features of the pars cochlearis and epitympanic recess have been obliterated. Posterior to the broad and shallow hiatus epitympanicus is a remnant of the base of the posterior process (which is directed posterolaterally and somewhat ventrally).
Discussion
.
Miller (1924: 8–9)
listed the following features that distinguish the periotics of
Balaenidae
from those of
Balaenopteridae
(and other baleen-bearing
Mysticeti
): (1) axis of anterior process of periotic parallel with axis of internal acoustic meatus; (2) [longitudinal] axes of anterior and posteri- or processes converge at an acute angle; and (3) pars cochlearis small relative to rest of periotic. In addition to the preceding features, the possession of massive lateral exostosis of the anterior process and anterolateral superior process, such that the anterior process appears swollen (as noted by
Fordyce, 1982: 48
), seems to be a feature shared by all extant and late Neogene balaenid periotics. It is largely on the basis of the latter character and the phenetic similarity of P218269 to a periotic (P16195) from the Lower Pliocene Black Rock Sandstone of Beaumaris identified as belonging to cf. “
Balaena
” (
Gill, 1957
) that P218269 is referred to
Balaenidae
, genus and species indeterminate.
The fossil record of
Balaenidae
begins in the Late Oligocene (c. 28 Ma:
Fordyce, 2002b
), although the record only becomes reasonably well known from the Mio-Pliocene boundary onwards (
McLeod et al., 1993
;
Bisconti, 2003
).
Morenocetus parvus
Cabrera, 1926
is the geologically oldest named balaenid, from the early Early Miocene (Aquitanian) of Patagonia. From the end Aquitanian to early Tortonian of the Miocene the evolutionary history of
Balaenidae
is virtually unknown. The extant balaenids include
Balaena mysticetus
Linnaeus, 1758
,
Eubalaena australis
Desmoulins, 1822
,
E. glacialis
Müller, 1776
, and
E. japonica
Lacépède, 1818
(e.g.,
Cummings, 1985
;
Reeves and Leatherwood, 1985
;
Bannister, 2002
). Note that
Rice (1998)
included all extant balaenids in the genus
Balaena
and recognised only two species,
B. mysticetus
and
B. glacialis
. The taxonomic scheme of
Bannister (2002)
is used herein.
Balaena
is known from the Early Pliocene of the North Atlantic (
McLeod et al., 1993
;
Westgate and Whitmore, 2002
). There are very few confirmed pre-Quaternary fossil records of
Eubalaena
.
Bisconti (2003
,
2005
) referred the Pliocene
Balaena belgica
Abel, 1941
to
Eubalaena belgica
. McLeod and others (1993: 63) suggested that a balaenid periotic from the Early Pliocene of South Australia (originally recorded by Howchin: 1919) could represent
Eubalaena
(as opposed to its original referral to
Balaena
).
Dixon (1990)
described an incomplete Recent
Eubalaena australis
skeleton from Altona Bay, near Melbourne, Victoria. The latter specimen (C27879) includes tympanics and periotics. The extinct genera
Balaenula
and
Balaenotus
have been recorded from the Late Miocene through Pliocene of the N Pacific (
Barnes, 1977
;
McLeod et al., 1993
) and N Atlantic (
McLeod et al., 1993
;
Bisconti, 2003
and references therein). Recently,
Bisconti (2005)
described a new genus and species of relatively small balaenid,
Balaenella brachyrhynus
, from the Early Pliocene of
Belgium
.
The incompleteness of P218269 and lack of information on the extent of intraspecific and ontogenetic variation in balaenid periotics, hampers comparisons with described extant and fossil balaenid taxa. Furthermore, there are as yet no published criteria for discriminating between the periotics of
Balaena
and
Eubalaena
. Despite these problems, it may be noted that P218269 is similar in overall size to several isolated balaenid periotics from the uppermost Miocene to Lower Pliocene Black Rock Sandstone and Grange Burn Formation of
Victoria
(e.g. P16195, P48865, P160438, and P197824). The discovery of a more complete periotic (including the pars cochlearis) is necessary before any further comparisons between the Portland Pliocene balaenid and the other Victorian specimens listed above can be made.