Retrieving Palaeoecological Information from Historic Fossil Finds: A Taphonomic Cold Case from Orciano Pisano (Central Italy) Reveals a Distinctive Trophic Interaction in the Pliocene Mediterranean Sea

Evidence of trophic interactions between sharks and cetaceans is rather widespread in the fossil record, consisting as it does of tooth marks on bones and rarer teeth or tooth fragments embedded in (or associated with) skeletal remains. Here, we reappraise a partial mysticete (baleen whale) forelimb...

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Published in:Journal of Marine Science and Engineering
Main Authors: Edoardo Terranova, Giovanni Bianucci, Marco Merella, Chiara Sorbini, Alberto Collareta
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse13030508
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author Edoardo Terranova
Giovanni Bianucci
Marco Merella
Chiara Sorbini
Alberto Collareta
author_facet Edoardo Terranova
Giovanni Bianucci
Marco Merella
Chiara Sorbini
Alberto Collareta
author_sort Edoardo Terranova
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
container_issue 3
container_start_page 508
container_title Journal of Marine Science and Engineering
container_volume 13
description Evidence of trophic interactions between sharks and cetaceans is rather widespread in the fossil record, consisting as it does of tooth marks on bones and rarer teeth or tooth fragments embedded in (or associated with) skeletal remains. Here, we reappraise a partial mysticete (baleen whale) forelimb that was collected more than a century ago from Pliocene deposits exposed at the celebrated fossil locality of Orciano Pisano (Tuscany, central Italy). This specimen, which is revealed to originate from an early juvenile individual, features shark tooth marks on both the humerus and radius. Whether these traces are due to active predation or to scavenging cannot be ascertained. During the Pliocene, the Mediterranean Basin was inhabited by a diverse elasmobranch fauna, including a number of mammal-eating forms that no longer inhabit the Mediterranean Sea (e.g., Galeocerdo and some Carcharhinus spp. as well as the extinct Parotodus). Early juvenile mysticetes were also likely more common than today in the Pliocene Mediterranean Sea, which may have contained balaenid and balaenopterid calving grounds, thus providing the Mediterranean mammal-eating sharks with vulnerable, energetically valuable potential prey items. Thus, our results evoke a kind of trophic interaction that was likely common and ecologically relevant in the Pliocene Mediterranean Sea.
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2077-1312/13/3/508/ 2025-04-06T14:48:25+00:00 Retrieving Palaeoecological Information from Historic Fossil Finds: A Taphonomic Cold Case from Orciano Pisano (Central Italy) Reveals a Distinctive Trophic Interaction in the Pliocene Mediterranean Sea Edoardo Terranova Giovanni Bianucci Marco Merella Chiara Sorbini Alberto Collareta agris 2025-03-05 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse13030508 eng eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Marine Biology https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jmse13030508 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Journal of Marine Science and Engineering Volume 13 Issue 3 Pages: 508 tooth marks forelimb mammal-eating sharks Mysticeti palaeoecology taphonomy Tuscany Text 2025 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse13030508 2025-03-10T15:39:48Z Evidence of trophic interactions between sharks and cetaceans is rather widespread in the fossil record, consisting as it does of tooth marks on bones and rarer teeth or tooth fragments embedded in (or associated with) skeletal remains. Here, we reappraise a partial mysticete (baleen whale) forelimb that was collected more than a century ago from Pliocene deposits exposed at the celebrated fossil locality of Orciano Pisano (Tuscany, central Italy). This specimen, which is revealed to originate from an early juvenile individual, features shark tooth marks on both the humerus and radius. Whether these traces are due to active predation or to scavenging cannot be ascertained. During the Pliocene, the Mediterranean Basin was inhabited by a diverse elasmobranch fauna, including a number of mammal-eating forms that no longer inhabit the Mediterranean Sea (e.g., Galeocerdo and some Carcharhinus spp. as well as the extinct Parotodus). Early juvenile mysticetes were also likely more common than today in the Pliocene Mediterranean Sea, which may have contained balaenid and balaenopterid calving grounds, thus providing the Mediterranean mammal-eating sharks with vulnerable, energetically valuable potential prey items. Thus, our results evoke a kind of trophic interaction that was likely common and ecologically relevant in the Pliocene Mediterranean Sea. Text baleen whale MDPI Open Access Publishing Pisano ENVELOPE(-61.233,-61.233,-62.783,-62.783) Journal of Marine Science and Engineering 13 3 508
spellingShingle tooth marks
forelimb
mammal-eating sharks
Mysticeti
palaeoecology
taphonomy
Tuscany
Edoardo Terranova
Giovanni Bianucci
Marco Merella
Chiara Sorbini
Alberto Collareta
Retrieving Palaeoecological Information from Historic Fossil Finds: A Taphonomic Cold Case from Orciano Pisano (Central Italy) Reveals a Distinctive Trophic Interaction in the Pliocene Mediterranean Sea
title Retrieving Palaeoecological Information from Historic Fossil Finds: A Taphonomic Cold Case from Orciano Pisano (Central Italy) Reveals a Distinctive Trophic Interaction in the Pliocene Mediterranean Sea
title_full Retrieving Palaeoecological Information from Historic Fossil Finds: A Taphonomic Cold Case from Orciano Pisano (Central Italy) Reveals a Distinctive Trophic Interaction in the Pliocene Mediterranean Sea
title_fullStr Retrieving Palaeoecological Information from Historic Fossil Finds: A Taphonomic Cold Case from Orciano Pisano (Central Italy) Reveals a Distinctive Trophic Interaction in the Pliocene Mediterranean Sea
title_full_unstemmed Retrieving Palaeoecological Information from Historic Fossil Finds: A Taphonomic Cold Case from Orciano Pisano (Central Italy) Reveals a Distinctive Trophic Interaction in the Pliocene Mediterranean Sea
title_short Retrieving Palaeoecological Information from Historic Fossil Finds: A Taphonomic Cold Case from Orciano Pisano (Central Italy) Reveals a Distinctive Trophic Interaction in the Pliocene Mediterranean Sea
title_sort retrieving palaeoecological information from historic fossil finds: a taphonomic cold case from orciano pisano (central italy) reveals a distinctive trophic interaction in the pliocene mediterranean sea
topic tooth marks
forelimb
mammal-eating sharks
Mysticeti
palaeoecology
taphonomy
Tuscany
topic_facet tooth marks
forelimb
mammal-eating sharks
Mysticeti
palaeoecology
taphonomy
Tuscany
url https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse13030508