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A close relative of the Amazon river dolphin in marine deposits: a new Iniidae from the late Miocene of Angola

BACKGROUND: A few odontocetes (echolocating toothed cetaceans) have been able to independently colonize freshwater ecosystems. Although some extant species of delphinids (true dolphins) and phocoenids (porpoises) at least occasionally migrate upstream of large river systems, they have close relative...

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Autores principales: Lambert, Olivier, Auclair, Camille, Cauxeiro, Cirilo, Lopez, Michel, Adnet, Sylvain
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6139015/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30225172
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5556
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author Lambert, Olivier
Auclair, Camille
Cauxeiro, Cirilo
Lopez, Michel
Adnet, Sylvain
author_facet Lambert, Olivier
Auclair, Camille
Cauxeiro, Cirilo
Lopez, Michel
Adnet, Sylvain
author_sort Lambert, Olivier
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: A few odontocetes (echolocating toothed cetaceans) have been able to independently colonize freshwater ecosystems. Although some extant species of delphinids (true dolphins) and phocoenids (porpoises) at least occasionally migrate upstream of large river systems, they have close relatives in fully marine regions. This contrasts with the three odontocete families only containing extant species with a strictly freshwater habitat (Iniidae in South America, the recently extinct Lipotidae in China, and Platanistidae in southeast Asia). Among those, the fossil record of Iniidae includes taxa from freshwater deposits of South America, partly overlapping geographically with the extant Amazon river dolphin Inia geoffrensis, whereas a few marine species from the Americas were only tentatively referred to the family, leaving the transition from a marine to freshwater environment poorly understood. METHODS: Based on a partial odontocete skeleton including the cranium, discovered in late Miocene (Tortonian-Messinian) marine deposits near the estuary of the Cuanza River, Angola, we describe a new large iniid genus and species. The new taxon is compared to other extinct and extant iniids, and its phylogenetic relationships with the latter are investigated through cladistic analysis. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: The new genus and species Kwanzacetus khoisani shares a series of morphological features with Inia geoffrensis, including the combination of a frontal boss with nasals being lower on the anterior wall of the vertex, the laterally directed postorbital process of the frontal, the anteroposterior thickening of the nuchal crest, and robust teeth with wrinkled enamel. As confirmed (although with a low support) with the phylogenetic analysis, this makes the new taxon the closest relative of I. geoffrensis found in marine deposits. The geographic provenance of K. khoisani, on the eastern coast of South Atlantic, suggests that the transition from the marine environment to a freshwater, Amazonian habitat may have occurred on the Atlantic side of South America. This new record further increases the inioid diversity during the late Miocene, a time interval confirmed here as the heyday for this superfamily. Finally, this first description of a Neogene cetacean from inland deposits of western sub-Saharan Africa reveals the potential of this large coastal area for deciphering key steps of the evolutionary history of modern cetaceans in the South Atlantic.
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spelling pubmed-61390152018-09-17 A close relative of the Amazon river dolphin in marine deposits: a new Iniidae from the late Miocene of Angola Lambert, Olivier Auclair, Camille Cauxeiro, Cirilo Lopez, Michel Adnet, Sylvain PeerJ Evolutionary Studies BACKGROUND: A few odontocetes (echolocating toothed cetaceans) have been able to independently colonize freshwater ecosystems. Although some extant species of delphinids (true dolphins) and phocoenids (porpoises) at least occasionally migrate upstream of large river systems, they have close relatives in fully marine regions. This contrasts with the three odontocete families only containing extant species with a strictly freshwater habitat (Iniidae in South America, the recently extinct Lipotidae in China, and Platanistidae in southeast Asia). Among those, the fossil record of Iniidae includes taxa from freshwater deposits of South America, partly overlapping geographically with the extant Amazon river dolphin Inia geoffrensis, whereas a few marine species from the Americas were only tentatively referred to the family, leaving the transition from a marine to freshwater environment poorly understood. METHODS: Based on a partial odontocete skeleton including the cranium, discovered in late Miocene (Tortonian-Messinian) marine deposits near the estuary of the Cuanza River, Angola, we describe a new large iniid genus and species. The new taxon is compared to other extinct and extant iniids, and its phylogenetic relationships with the latter are investigated through cladistic analysis. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: The new genus and species Kwanzacetus khoisani shares a series of morphological features with Inia geoffrensis, including the combination of a frontal boss with nasals being lower on the anterior wall of the vertex, the laterally directed postorbital process of the frontal, the anteroposterior thickening of the nuchal crest, and robust teeth with wrinkled enamel. As confirmed (although with a low support) with the phylogenetic analysis, this makes the new taxon the closest relative of I. geoffrensis found in marine deposits. The geographic provenance of K. khoisani, on the eastern coast of South Atlantic, suggests that the transition from the marine environment to a freshwater, Amazonian habitat may have occurred on the Atlantic side of South America. This new record further increases the inioid diversity during the late Miocene, a time interval confirmed here as the heyday for this superfamily. Finally, this first description of a Neogene cetacean from inland deposits of western sub-Saharan Africa reveals the potential of this large coastal area for deciphering key steps of the evolutionary history of modern cetaceans in the South Atlantic. PeerJ Inc. 2018-09-12 /pmc/articles/PMC6139015/ /pubmed/30225172 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5556 Text en ©2018 Lambert et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Evolutionary Studies
Lambert, Olivier
Auclair, Camille
Cauxeiro, Cirilo
Lopez, Michel
Adnet, Sylvain
A close relative of the Amazon river dolphin in marine deposits: a new Iniidae from the late Miocene of Angola
title A close relative of the Amazon river dolphin in marine deposits: a new Iniidae from the late Miocene of Angola
title_full A close relative of the Amazon river dolphin in marine deposits: a new Iniidae from the late Miocene of Angola
title_fullStr A close relative of the Amazon river dolphin in marine deposits: a new Iniidae from the late Miocene of Angola
title_full_unstemmed A close relative of the Amazon river dolphin in marine deposits: a new Iniidae from the late Miocene of Angola
title_short A close relative of the Amazon river dolphin in marine deposits: a new Iniidae from the late Miocene of Angola
title_sort close relative of the amazon river dolphin in marine deposits: a new iniidae from the late miocene of angola
topic Evolutionary Studies
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6139015/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30225172
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5556
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