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Fossil whale barnacles from the lower Pleistocene of Sicily shed light on the coeval Mediterranean cetacean fauna
Collareta, A.; Insacco, G.; Reitano, A.; Catanzariti, R.; Bosselaers, M.; Montes, M.; Bianucci, G. (2018). Fossil whale barnacles from the lower Pleistocene of Sicily shed light on the coeval Mediterranean cetacean fauna. Carnets de Géologie = Notebooks on Geology 18(2): 9-22. https://dx.doi.org/10.4267/2042/65747
In: Carnets de Géologie = Notebooks on Geology. Carnets de Géologie: Brest. e-ISSN 1634-0744, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Balaenopteridae Gray, 1864 [WoRMS]; Cirripedia [WoRMS]; Coronulidae Leach, 1817 [WoRMS]; Mysticeti Flower, 1864 [WoRMS]
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    Cirripedia; Coronulidae; Mysticeti; Balaenopteridae; habitat loss;Mediterranean Basin

Authors  Top 
  • Collareta, A.
  • Insacco, G.
  • Reitano, A.
  • Catanzariti, R.
  • Bosselaers, M., more
  • Montes, M.
  • Bianucci, G.

Abstract
    We report on three shells of whale barnacle (Cirripedia: Coronulidae) collected from Pleistocene shallow-marine deposits exposed at Cinisi (northwestern Sicily, southern Italy). These specimens are identified as belonging to the extinct species Coronula bifida BRONN, 1831. Calcareous nannoplankton analysis of the sediment hosting the coronulid remains places the time of deposition between 1.93 and 1.71 Ma (i.e., at the Gelasian-Calabrian transition), an interval during which another deposit rich in whale barnacles exposed in southeastern Apulia (southern Italy) formed. Since Coronula LAMARCK, 1802, is currently found inhabiting the skin of humpback whales [Cetacea: Balaenopteridae: Megaptera novaeangliae (BOROWSKI, 1781)], and considering that the detachment of extant coronulids from their hosts' skin has been mainly observed in occurrence of cetacean breeding/calving areas, the material here studied supports the existence of a baleen whale migration route between the central Mediterranean Sea (the putative reproductive ground) and the North Atlantic (the putative feeding ground) around 1.8 Ma, when several portions of present-day southern Italy were still submerged. The early Pleistocene utilization of the epeiric seas of southern Italy as breeding/calving areas by migrating mysticetes appears to be linked to the severe climatic degradation that has been recognized at the Gelasian-Calabrian transition and that is marked in the fossil record of the Mediterranean Basin by the appearance of "northern guests" such as Arctica islandica (LINNAEUS, 1767) (Bivalvia: Veneroida). The subsequent abandonment of the Mediterranean Sea by most species of mysticetes is likely to have resulted from the progressive emergence of shallow-water coastal environments that occurred in Calabrian and Middle Pleistocene times.

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