Frilled Sharks (Hexanchiformes, Chlamydoselachidae): New Data on Diversity and Distribution
- Authors: Malyshkina T.P.1, Nazarkin M.V.2
-
Affiliations:
- Zavaritsky Institute of Geology and Geochemistry, Urals Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences
- Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences
- Issue: No 5 (2024)
- Pages: 83-94
- Section: Articles
- URL: https://journals.rcsi.science/0031-031X/article/view/284695
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.31857/S0031031X24050093
- EDN: https://elibrary.ru/QUTXZP
- ID: 284695
Cite item
Abstract
Findings of frilled sharks, both fossil and modern, are very rare, which is primarily due to their deep-sea lifestyle. A tooth of frilled shark Chlamydoselachus kamchaticus sp. nov. was found in the Upper Eocene sediments of the Isthmus Mountain Formation on Karaginsky Island (Bering Sea, off northeastern Kamchatka). The large size of the tooth suggests a fish size close to the maximum for the genus, more than twice the size of modern Chlamydoselachus. This find is the northernmost for fossil frilled sharks and is located 20° to North of the modern northern limit of the genus’ distribution in the Pacific Ocean. This may indicate a climate warmer than modern in the region of Eastern Kamchatka in the late Eocene.
About the authors
T. P. Malyshkina
Zavaritsky Institute of Geology and Geochemistry, Urals Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences
Author for correspondence.
Email: prionace@yandex.ru
Russian Federation, Ekaterinburg, 620151
M. V. Nazarkin
Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences
Email: mikhail.nazarkin@zin.ru
Russian Federation, St. Petersburg, 199034
References
- Гречина Н.И. Новый вид Coryphaenoides (Teleostei) из олигоцена Камчатки // Палеонтол. журн. 1973. № 1. С. 116–118.
- Крашенинников В.А., Серова М.Я., Басов И.А. Стратиграфия и планктонные фораминиферы палеогена высоких широт Тихого океана М.: Наука, 1988. 120 с.
- Назаркин М.В., Малышкина Т.П. Эоценовая ихтиофауна острова Карагинский (Берингово море) // Биогеография и эволюционные процессы. Матер. LXVI сессии Палеонтол. об-ва при РАН. СПб.: Картфабрика ВСЕГЕИ, 2020. С. 261–263.
- Серова М.Я. Фораминиферы и биостратиграфия верхнего палеогена Северной Пацифики. М.: Наука, 2001. 215 с.
- Серова М.Я., Борзунова Г.П., Шапиро М.Н. Палеоген южной части острова Карагинского (Восточная Камчатка) // Изв. АН СССР. Сер. геол. 1975. № 11. С. 73–83.
- Adnet S. Nouvelles faunes de sélaciens (Elasmobranchii, Neoselachii) de l’Éocène des Landes (Sud-Ouest, France). Implication dans les connaissances des communautés d’eaux profondes // Palaeo Ichthyologica. 2006. V. 10. P. 5–128.
- Antunes M.T., Cappetta H. Sélaciens du Crétacé (Albien-Maastrichtien) d’Angola // Palaeontogr. Abt. A. 2002. V. 264. № 5–6. P. 85–146.
- Cappetta H. Mesozoic and Cenozoic Elasmobranchii: Teeth. München: Verlag Dr. F. Pfeil, 2012. 512 p. (Handbook of Paleoichthyology. V. 3E. Chondrichthyes / Ed. Schulze H.P.).
- Cappetta H., Morrison K., Adnet S. A shark fauna from the Campanian of Hornby Island, British Columbia, Canada: an insight into the diversity of Cretaceous deep-water assemblages // Hist. Biol. 2021 (2019). V. 33. № 8. P. 1121–1182. https://doi.org/10.1080/08912963.2019.1681421
- Carlsen A.W., Cuny G. A study of the sharks and rays from the Lillebælt Clay (Early–Middle Eocene) of Denmark, and their palaeoecology // Bull. Geol. Soc. Denm. 2014. V. 62. P. 39–88. doi: 10.37570/bgsd-2014-62-04
- Carrillo-Briceño J.D., Aguilera O.A., Rodriguez F. Fossil Chondrichthyes from the central eastern Pacific Ocean and their paleoceanographic significance // J. South Amer. Earth Sci. 2014. V. 51. P. 76–90. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsames.2014.01.001
- Cigala-Fulgosi F., Casati S., Orlandini A. et al. A small fossil fish fauna, rich in Chlamydoselachus teeth, from the Late Pliocene of Tuscany (Siena, central Italy) // Cainoz. Res. 2009. V. 6. № 1/2. P. 3–23.
- Consoli C.P. A rare Danian (early Paleocene) Chlamydoselachus (Chondrichthyes: Elasmobranchii) from the Takatika Grit, Chatham Islands, New Zealand // J. Vertebr. Paleontol. 2008. V. 28. № 2. P. 285–290. https://doi.org/10.1671/0272-4634(2008)28[285:ardepc]2.0.co;2
- Davis J.W. Note on a fossil species of Chlamydoselachus // Proc. Zool. Soc. London. 1887. P. 542–544.
- Ebert D.A., Compagno L.J.V. Chlamydoselachus africana, a new species of frilled shark from southern Africa (Chondrichthyes, Hexanchiformes, Chlamydoselachidae) // Zootaxa. 2009. V. 2173. P. 1–18.
- Ebert D.A., Dando M., Fowler S. Sharks of the World: A Complete Guide. Prinseton, New Jersey: Princeton Univ. Press, 2021. 607 p. https://doi.org/10.1515/9780691210872
- Feichtinger I., Pollerspöck J., Harzhauser M. et al. Shifts in composition of northern Tethyan elasmobranch assemblages during the last millennia of the Cretaceous // Cret. Res. 2023. V. 142. P. 105414. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cretres.2022.105414
- Feichtinger I., Pollerspöck J., Harzhauser M. et al. Elasmobranch assemblages from a bathyal environment spanning the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary in Austria // Austrian J. Earth Sci. 2024. V. 117. № 1. P. 1–11.
- https://doi.org/10.17738/ajes.2024.0001
- Garman S. An extraordinary shark // Bull. Essex Inst. 1884. V. 16. P. 47–55.
- Goto M. Tooth remains of chlamydoselachian sharks from Japan and their phylogeny and paleoecology // Earth Sci. (Chikyu Kagaku). 2004. V. 58. № 6. P. 361–374.
- Herman J., Hovestadt-Euler M., Hovestadt D.C. Contributions to the study of the comparative morphology of teeth and other relevant ichthyodorulites in living supraspecific taxa of Chondrichthyan fishes. Addendum to Part A, No. 1b: Hexanchiformes – Family: Chlamidoselachidae; No. 5: Order: Heterodontiformes – Family: Heterodontidae; No. 6: Order: Lamniformes – Families: Cetorhinidae, Megachasmidae; Addendum 1 to No. 3: Order: Squaliformes; Addendum 1 to No. 4: Order Orectolobiformes; General Glossary; Summary Part A // Bull. Inst. Roy. Sci. Natur. Belgique. Biol. 1993. V. 63. P. 185–256.
- Höltke O., Salvador R.B., Rasser M.W. Trophic relationships in the Early Miocene Upper Marine Molasse of Baden-Württemberg, Southwest Germany, with special emphasis on the elasmobranch fauna // Paleontol. Electron. 2023. V. 26. № 3. Art. a46.
- https://doi.org/10.26879/1233
- Leriche M. Sur une forme nouvelle du genre Chlamydoselachus (C. tobleri) rejetée par le volcan de boue de Chagonary (île de la Trinité, Petites-Antilles) // Bull. Soc. Belge Géol. Paléontol. Hydrol. 1929. V. 38. № 1. P. 55–58.
- Mannering A.A., Hiller N. An Early Cenozoic neoselachian shark fauna from the southwest Pacific // Palaeontol. 2008. V. 51. Pt. 6. P. 1341–1365.
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-4983.2008.00812.x
- Marsili S. Systematic, paleoecologic and paleobiogeographic analysis of the Plio-Pleistocene Mediterranean elasmobranch fauna // Atti Soc. Toscana Sci. Natur. Ser. A. 2008. V. 113. P. 81–88.
- McDougall K. California Cenozoic biostratigraphy – Paleogene. Chapter 4 // Petroleum Systems and Geologic Assessment of Oil and Gas in the San Joaquin Basin Province, California (Geol. Surv. Prof. Pap. 2008. № 1713. P. 1–56).
- Nakagawa F. 2024. Tokyo Bay Sharks Chlamydoselachus anguineus Garman, 1884. Ver. 2.0. http://naka.na.coocan.jp/tokyorabuka2.html (обращение 25.05.2024)
- Nishimatsu K., Ujihara A. A new deep-sea shark Scymnodalatias kazenobon (Squaliformes, Somniosidae) from the Miocene Yatsuo Group in central Japan // Paleontol. Res. 2019. V. 23. № 1. P. 23–29.
- https://doi.org/10.2517/2018PR006
- Otero R.A., Gutstein C.S., Vargas A. et al. New chondrichthyans from the Upper Cretaceous (Campanian–Maastrichtian) of Seymour and James Ross islands, Antarctica // J. Paleontol. 2014. V. 88. № 3. P. 411–420.
- https://doi.org/10.1666/13-041
- Pfeil F.H. Zahnmorphologische Untersuchungen an rezenten und fossilen Haien der Ordnungen Chlamydoselachiformes und Echinorhiniformes // Palaeo Ichthyologica. 1983. V. 1. P. 1–315.
- Richter M., Ward D.J. Fish remains from the Santa Marta Formation (Late Cretaceous) of James Ross Island, Antarctica // Antarct. Sci. 1990. V. 2. № 1. P. 67–76.
- https://doi.org/10.1017/S0954102090000074
- Sepkoski J.J. A compendium of fossil marine animal genera // Bull. Amer. Paleontol. 2002. V. 363. P. 1–560.
- Takakuwa Y. A deep-sea shark assemblage from the Miocene in southwest of Gunma Prefecture, central Japan and the biogeographical significance // Fossils. Palaeontol. Soc. Japan. 2006. V. 81. P. 24–44.
- Yabumoto Y., Uyeno T. Late Mesozoic and Cenozoic fish faunas of Japan // Island Arc. 1994. V. 3. № 4. P. 255–269.
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1440-1738.1994.tb00115.x
Supplementary files
