AI Article Synopsis

  • Over a span of approximately 10 million years, whale ancestors evolved from land-dwelling herbivores into fully aquatic, carnivorous cetaceans.
  • A newly identified medium-sized protocetid from the middle Eocene period in Egypt showcases unique skeletal features, indicating a more effective feeding mechanism compared to typical protocetids.
  • This finding also suggests the coexistence of two ancient whale families in Africa, enhancing our knowledge of early whale evolution and ecology.

Article Abstract

Over about 10 million years, the ancestors of whales transformed from herbivorous, deer-like, terrestrial mammals into carnivorous and fully aquatic cetaceans. Protocetids are Eocene whales that represent a unique semiaquatic stage in that dramatic evolutionary transformation. Here, we report on a new medium-sized protocetid, gen. et sp. nov., consisting of a partial skeleton from the middle Eocene (Lutetian) of the Fayum Depression in Egypt. The new species differs from other protocetids in having large, elongated temporal fossae, anteriorly placed pterygoids, elongated parietals, an unfused mandibular symphysis that terminates at the level of P, and a relatively enlarged I. Unique features of the skull and mandible suggest a capacity for more efficient oral mechanical processing than the typical protocetid condition, thereby allowing for a strong raptorial feeding style. Phylogenetic analysis nests within the paraphyletic Protocetidae, as the most basal protocetid known from Africa. Recovery of from the same bed that yielded the remingtonocetid provides the first clear evidence for the co-occurrence of the basal cetacean families Remingtonocetidae and Protocetidae in Africa. The discovery of further augments our understanding of the biogeography and feeding ecology of early whales.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8385364PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2021.1368DOI Listing

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