Suction feeding preceded filtering in baleen whale evolution

The origin of baleen, the key adaptation of modern whales (Mysticeti), marks a profound yet poorly understood transition in vertebrate evolution, triggering the rise of the largest animals on Earth. Baleen is thought to have appeared in archaic tooth-bearing mysticetes during a transitional phase th...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Marx, Felix G., Hocking, David P., Park, Travis, Ziegler, Tim, Evans, Alistair R., Fitzgerald, Erich M.G.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/581695
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.581695
Description
Summary:The origin of baleen, the key adaptation of modern whales (Mysticeti), marks a profound yet poorly understood transition in vertebrate evolution, triggering the rise of the largest animals on Earth. Baleen is thought to have appeared in archaic tooth-bearing mysticetes during a transitional phase that combined raptorial feeding with incipient bulk filtering. Here we show that tooth wear in a new Late Oligocene mysticete belonging to the putatively transitional family Aetiocetidae is inconsistent with the presence of baleen, and instead indicative of suction feeding. Our findings suggest that baleen arose much closer to the origin of toothless mysticete whales than previously thought. In addition, they suggest an entirely new evolutionary scenario in which the transition from raptorial to baleen-assisted filter feeding was mediated by suction, thereby avoiding the problem of functional interference between teeth and the baleen rack.