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First Skeletal Fossil Record of the Red Seabream (Sparidae, Perciformes) from the Late Pleistocene of Subtropical West Pacific, Southern Taiwan. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Fish fossils in Taiwan are rare and often under-researched, but some localities from the Plio-Pleistocene period have well-preserved marine specimens.
  • A recent discovery from the Late Pleistocene Szekou Formation includes a sandstone nodule containing nearly complete fish skeletons, identified as belonging to the Sparidae family based on its distinct tooth structure.
  • This finding represents the first evidence of this species in Taiwan, suggesting it was a middle-to-top predator in a neritic lagoonal environment that fed on smaller fish and invertebrates.

Article Abstract

Fish fossils are only occasionally found in Taiwan, and such fossils are rarely appropriately analyzed and described. Despite their sparse records, several Plio-Pleistocene localities rich in marine organisms have yielded well-preserved specimens, potentially providing insight into the rarely identified fish fauna in the tropical-subtropical West Pacific. We describe a sandstone nodule containing fish skeletons from the Late Pleistocene Szekou Formation in southern Taiwan. The specimen includes nearly complete left jaws, fragmentary right jaws, and part of the anterior body. The distinct dentition of the specimen suggests it to be a member of Sparidae family. Further morphological analysis based on dentition and a comparison with 153 recent specimens belonging to 14 sparid species in the area enabled us to assign the fossil to the species . We found that the characteristic sparid tooth patterns are useful in generic determination, at least in Taiwan. The occurrence of the specimen is the first evidence of in the region. Finally, the specialized tooth pattern and the estimated size indicate that the fish was a middle-to-top predator that fed on small fish and invertebrates in a neritic lagoonal environment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9579959PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.6620/ZS.2022.61-10DOI Listing

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