A rare window into a back-reef fish community from the middle Miocene (late Badenian) Medobory Hills barrier reef in western Ukraine, reconstructed mostly by means of otoliths
Author
Schwarzhans, Werner
Natural History Museum of Denmark, Zoological Museum, Universitetsparken 15, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark
Author
Klots, Oleksandr
Author
Ryabokon, Tamara
Author
Kovalchuk, Oleksandr
text
Swiss Journal of Palaeontology
2022
18
2022-11-17
141
1
1
35
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13358-022-00261-3
journal article
10.1186/s13358-022-00261-3
1664-2384
11999827
Deltentosteus
aff.
telleri
(
Schubert,
1906
)
Figure 7a–e
2020a
Deltentosteus
aff.
telleri
(
Schubert, 1906
)
—Schwarzhans, Brzobohatý & Radwańska: pl. 8, figs. 17–21 (and references therein).
Material
8 otoliths:
3 specimens
, Kozatskyi Yar,
NMNHU-P
PI 2552
;
2 specimens
, Mlyntsi,
NMB
P1209
;
3 specimens
, Shydlivshchyna,
NMNHU-P
PI 2553
.
Discussion
Deltentosteus telleri
was a widely distributed and common species in the middle Miocene of the Tethys and Paratethys and the late Miocene of the Tethys. Te otoliths are easily recognizable by their smooth, convex inner face with a shallow sulcus, which has a much widened ostial region and ostial lobe, and narrowed caudal tip. Te otolith outline does not usually show preventral or postdorsal projections.
Otoliths of
D. telleri
show a certain degree of variability and considerable allometric ontogenetic growth. Morphological variations of large specimens have been observed by
Radwańska (1992)
and Schwarzhans et. al. (2020a), particularly in the locality Niskowa in
Poland
; these variations have been tentatively attributed to alterations that may have resulted “from temporary fluctuations in salinity of the coastal waters” that may occur in a marginal marine environment with varying freshwater influx (
Radwańska, 1992
). Among the observed alterations in the otoliths from Niskowa were the reduction of the colliculum from the tapering cauda, reduction of the ostial lobe, and differences in otolith shape and thickness. Te largest specimen now available from the Medobory back-reef environment (
Fig. 7a
) shares most of the characteristics observed in the specimens from Niskowa but stems from a completely different environments (reef-associated vs. marginal marine with freshwater influx). Terefore, it now seems possible that these morphotypes actually represent a different species. However, a wider review of otoliths attributed to
D. telleri
is necessary before a conclusive assessment can be made.
Te otoliths of
Deltentosteus
aff.
telleri
described here from the Medobory back reef are also remarkable in that they represent a rather complete ontogenetic sequence, which has thus far rarely been observed in the species, where the fossil record is dominated by adult specimens. Te ontogenetic sequence shows a distinct allometry, with small specimens being much more compressed than large ones. Te ratio OL:OH ranges from
1.02 to 1.07 in
specimens of 1.0–
1.4 mm
in length (
Fig. 7c–e
); the ratio is about
1.15 in
a specimen of
1.8 mm
in length (
Fig. 7b
) and about
1.25 in
a specimen of
2.1 mm
in length
Fig. 7
Otoliths of Gobionellidae:
a–e
Deltentosteus
aff.
telleri
(
Schubert, 1906
)
, 7a Shydlivshchyna, NMNHU-P PI 2553,
b
(reversed),
d
Kozatskyi Yar, NMNHU-P PI 2552,
c
(reversed),
e
Mlyntsi, NMB P1209.
f
,
g
Economidichthys triangularis
(
Weiler, 1943
)
,
f
(reversed) Shydlivshchyna, NMB P1210,
g
(reversed) Mlyntsi, NMNHU-P PI 2554.
h
,
i
Knipowitschia polonica
Schwarzhans et al., 2020a
,
2020b
,
h
Shydlivshchyna, NMNHU-P PI 2562,
i
Kozatskyi Yar,NMB P1213.
j
,
k
Pomatoschistus elegans
(Procházka, 1900)
,
j
(reversed) Kozatskyi Yar, NMNHU-P PI 2576,
k
(reversed) Shydlivshchyna, NMB P1222
(
Fig. 7a
). Likewise, the crenulation of the dorsal rim, albeit weak, is only evident in specimens of about
1.2 to 1.8 mm
in length (
Fig. 7b, c
). Te characteristic reduction of the colliculum in the cauda, however, is a stable trait in all sizes observed and could possibly represent a diagnostically valuable feature.