Unique Short-Faced Miocene Seal Discovered in Grytsiv (Ukraine)

Numerous Miocene fossil terrestrial mammals have been discovered at the Gritsev locality of Ukraine, but this is the first record of a fossil marine mammal found at this site.  Dental morphology and morphometric analysis of the rostral portion of this middle-late Miocene (12.3-11.8 mya) partial skul...

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Main Authors: S. Rahmat, I. Koretsky
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Publishing House "Akademperiodyka" 2021-03-01
Series:Zoodiversity
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ojs.akademperiodyka.org.ua/index.php/Zoodiversity/article/view/121
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spelling doaj-66753d04f59b4909ab8bc2be1b6db0332021-04-29T13:24:10ZengPublishing House "Akademperiodyka"Zoodiversity2707-725X2707-72682021-03-01552143–154143–154121Unique Short-Faced Miocene Seal Discovered in Grytsiv (Ukraine)S. Rahmat0I. Koretsky1Howard UniversityHoward UniversityNumerous Miocene fossil terrestrial mammals have been discovered at the Gritsev locality of Ukraine, but this is the first record of a fossil marine mammal found at this site.  Dental morphology and morphometric analysis of the rostral portion of this middle-late Miocene (12.3-11.8 mya) partial skull suggests that it belongs to the subfamily Phocinae. The small size and cranial morphology of this partial skull is compared to Recent and fossil representatives of the extant subfamily Phocinae and the extinct subfamily Devinophocinae. Fossil and modern representatives of the extant subfamilies Cystophorinae and Monachinae were not incorporated in this study due to their extremely large size in comparison to this new finding. This newly described skull is a small-sized seal (likely similar in size to the modern sea otter based on the width of the rostrum) with an extremely short rostrum and several diagnostic characters that differ from all other fossil and extant phocines. Due to the lack of preservation and fragility of fossil seal skulls, less than 20 have been described so far. This new skull is yet another example of a small-sized ancestral seal, supporting the suggestion that modern seals have gotten larger over evolutionary history. Overall, any cranial information on fossil true seals is extremely vital to help resolve contentious phylogenetic relationships.http://ojs.akademperiodyka.org.ua/index.php/Zoodiversity/article/view/121phocidaephocinaeparatethysnorthern black sea region
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S. Rahmat
I. Koretsky
spellingShingle S. Rahmat
I. Koretsky
Unique Short-Faced Miocene Seal Discovered in Grytsiv (Ukraine)
Zoodiversity
phocidae
phocinae
paratethys
northern black sea region
author_facet S. Rahmat
I. Koretsky
author_sort S. Rahmat
title Unique Short-Faced Miocene Seal Discovered in Grytsiv (Ukraine)
title_short Unique Short-Faced Miocene Seal Discovered in Grytsiv (Ukraine)
title_full Unique Short-Faced Miocene Seal Discovered in Grytsiv (Ukraine)
title_fullStr Unique Short-Faced Miocene Seal Discovered in Grytsiv (Ukraine)
title_full_unstemmed Unique Short-Faced Miocene Seal Discovered in Grytsiv (Ukraine)
title_sort unique short-faced miocene seal discovered in grytsiv (ukraine)
publisher Publishing House "Akademperiodyka"
series Zoodiversity
issn 2707-725X
2707-7268
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Numerous Miocene fossil terrestrial mammals have been discovered at the Gritsev locality of Ukraine, but this is the first record of a fossil marine mammal found at this site.  Dental morphology and morphometric analysis of the rostral portion of this middle-late Miocene (12.3-11.8 mya) partial skull suggests that it belongs to the subfamily Phocinae. The small size and cranial morphology of this partial skull is compared to Recent and fossil representatives of the extant subfamily Phocinae and the extinct subfamily Devinophocinae. Fossil and modern representatives of the extant subfamilies Cystophorinae and Monachinae were not incorporated in this study due to their extremely large size in comparison to this new finding. This newly described skull is a small-sized seal (likely similar in size to the modern sea otter based on the width of the rostrum) with an extremely short rostrum and several diagnostic characters that differ from all other fossil and extant phocines. Due to the lack of preservation and fragility of fossil seal skulls, less than 20 have been described so far. This new skull is yet another example of a small-sized ancestral seal, supporting the suggestion that modern seals have gotten larger over evolutionary history. Overall, any cranial information on fossil true seals is extremely vital to help resolve contentious phylogenetic relationships.
topic phocidae
phocinae
paratethys
northern black sea region
url http://ojs.akademperiodyka.org.ua/index.php/Zoodiversity/article/view/121
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