4 research outputs found
Africanacetus from the sub-Antarctic region: The southernmost record of fossil beaked whales
We report two partial skulls of fossil beaked whales (Odontoceti, Ziphiidae) of uncertain age trawled from the sea floor of
the sub−Antarctic Indian Ocean (58 to 60S), representing the southernmost record of the family. The skulls possess diag−
nostic features of the genus Africanacetus, several specimens of which have been recovered from the sea floor off South
Africa, but differ from the type and only known species Africanacetus ceratopsis in their larger size. This difference may
either reflect intraspecific variation or indicate the existence of a hitherto unrecognised species. The two specimens are
characterised by unusually developed mesorostral ossifications, combined with maxillary crests occurring in the facial re−
gion. Both of the latter are found in a range of extant and extinct ziphiids, and known to be sexually dimorphic in extant
beaked whales. These structures may be the result of hypermorphosis driven by sexual selection, and could be involved in
male−specific behaviour