Middle Eocene vertebrate fauna from the Aridal Formation, Sabkha of Gueran, southwestern Morocco
Author
Zouhri, Samir
Author
Gingerich, Philip D.
Author
Khalloufi, Bouziane
Author
Bourdon, Estelle
Author
Adnet, Sylvain
Author
Jouve, Stéphane
Author
Elboudali, Najia
Author
Amane, Ayoub
Author
Rage, Jean-Claude
Author
Tabuce, Rodolphe
text
Geodiversitas
2021
2021-03-11
43
5
121
150
journal article
7746
10.5252/geodiversitas2021v43a5
e42658a2-0e15-4e90-9bc5-0d00cbcbd781
1638-9395
4605963
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:697FC553-E37B-4EF9-97A4-950E4DEE246C
Carcharhinus
sp.
MATERIAL
A dozen isolated teeth, figured material includes
FSAC
Bouj-345, 346 and 347
.
DESCRIPTION AND REMARKS
Some rare medium-sized sharks (
Fig. 3
G-I) are provisionally attributed to
Carcharhinus
sp. The upper tooth (
Fig. 4G
) reminds those of
Negaprion
sp. (unserrated cutting edges, main cusp separated from heels by notches) associated with erect and gracile lower teeth (
Fig. 4H, I
) usually observed in
Carcharhinus
,
and especially in Priabonian species
C. frequens
(Dames, 1883)
. Assignement of middle Eocene carcharhinid teeth to genera
Carcharhinus
or
Negaprion
Whitley, 1940
remains debatable and uncertain (see also
Sweydan
et al.
2019
for discussion) but its attribution to
Carcharhinus
seemly more appropriate in regard to the dignathic heterodonty.
Underwood
et al.
(2011)
only reported a “
Carcharhinidae
nov.gen.
” (sic) with smooth cutting edges in the middle Eocene MI, which is easily distinguishable from our material. No other mediumsized carcharhinid was collected within the studied area, particularly no representative of the “bull-shark” group among the Requiem sharks (see
Adnet
et al.
2007
) that displays upper teeth with a modern morphology (e.g., serrated cutting edges). However, such representative was possibly reported in MI by
Underwood
et al.
(2011
:
Carcharhinus
sp. 1) but the rare specimens are often poorly preserved and were provisionally referred to taxa only well-identified in Priabonian levels.
Underwood & Gunter (2012)
illustrated a large and unique upper tooth probably representing one of the oldest evidences of “Bullshark” from
Jamaica
(
Underwood & Gunter 2012
: fig. 2); postulated to have been from the Yellow Limestone Group exposed at Broomwell and dated as middle Eocene. However, the age of this unique evidence in still uncertain and no other middle Eocene record was verified. Uncertainty about the age of
Carcharhinus underwoodi
Samonds, Andrianavalona, Wallett, Zalmout & Ward, 2019
, the other oldest representative of “Bull-shark” group, is quite similar; being currently reported from middle to late Eocene of
Madagascar
. The lack of large modern
Carcharhinus
species in Boujdour area seems to indicate an early Bartonian age of the deposits, at least their absence is paleoenvironmentally controlled.