Macrorhizodus praecursor ( Leriche, 1905 )

Ebersole, Jun A., Cicimurri, David J. & Stringer, Gary L., 2019, Taxonomy and biostratigraphy of the elasmobranchs and bony fishes (Chondrichthyes and Osteichthyes) of the lower-to-middle Eocene (Ypresian to Bartonian) Claiborne Group in Alabama, USA, including an analysis of otoliths, European Journal of Taxonomy 585, pp. 1-274 : 56-58

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2019.585

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:181B6FBA-ED75-4BB4-84C4-FB512B794749

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3664542

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/18174D41-FFB2-FF96-FDDF-9AA549450BDF

treatment provided by

Plazi (2020-02-09 12:39:35, last updated 2024-11-28 18:45:09)

scientific name

Macrorhizodus praecursor ( Leriche, 1905 )
status

 

Macrorhizodus praecursor ( Leriche, 1905)

Fig. 20 View Fig

Otodus lawleyi Bassani, 1877: 80 , pl. 11, figs 3–5.

Oxyrhina desori praecursor Leriche, 1905: 128 .

Oxyrhina praecursor americana Leriche, 1942: 45 , pl. 3, figs 6–13.

Isurus desori praecursor – White 1931: 47 .

Macrorhizodus praecursor – Zharkov et al. 1976: 132 .

Isurus praecursor americana – Thurmond & Jones 1981: 55 , fig. 21.

Isurus oxyrhincus – Case 1980: 82 View in CoL , 99, pl. 2, figs 4–8.

Cosmopolitodus praecursor – Mustafa & Zalmout 2002: 82 , pl. 1, figs 7–11.

Material examined

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA – Alabama • 20 isolated teeth; Claiborne Group ; ALMNH PV1989.4.32.3, ALMNH PV 1989.4.15 (2 specimens), ALMNH PV1989.4.161.4 (2 specimens), ALMNH PV1989.4.6.1.1, ALMNH PV1989.4.97.2, ALMNH PV2013.4.56, ALMNH PV2016.3.142 ,

GSA-V696, GSA-V709 (3 specimens), MSC 2372.25, MSC 2374.1, MSC 2386.1–2, MSC 34585, MSC 35759, MSC 37174, MSC 37500.

Description

All teeth with large triangular crown and lack lateral cusplets. Labial crown face flat; lingual crown face moderately to strongly convex; both crown faces smooth. Main cusp on lower anterior teeth erect and triangular; mesial and distal cutting edges bi-convex. Roots robust with foramina located on large lingual boss (indistinct nutritive groove sometimes observed). Roots on lower anterior teeth slightly higher than the crown. Lower anterior teeth sigmoidal and lingual crown face strongly convex. Lower anterior teeth with robust root protuberance and rounded root lobes; interlobe area deep and U-shaped. Anterolateral teeth with tall triangular crown; height of the crown exceeds the height of the root. Crown on anterolateral teeth have a slight distal inclination and bi-convex mesial and distal cutting edges. Lingual crown face less convex than on anterior files and have a shallower interlobe area. Root lobes on anterolateral teeth range from rounded to angular. Mesial and distal cutting edges on upper lateral teeth distinctly concave. Crown is shorter than those on anterior or anterolateral files, and more triangular. Lateral crown edges slope to the lateral edges of root. Root lobes short, distinctly angular, and flattened basally. Have shallow V-shaped interlobe area.

Remarks

Leriche (1905) erected Oxyrhina desori praecursor for what he believed were Eocene teeth belonging to the stratigraphically younger O. desori Agassiz, 1843 . Based on specimens from Priabonian deposits in Choctaw County, Alabama, Leriche (1942) later erected Oxyrhina praecursor americana for teeth that he thought were similar to the praecursor morphology, but differed by having a higher root, narrower crown, and more divergent root lobes. These morphologies were later placed within Isurus by White (1931), then referred by Glikman (1964) to a new genus, Macrorhizodus . Subsequent authors later recognized both the praecursor and americana morphologies as distinct species (see White 1956; Ward & Wiest 1990; Zhelezko & Kozlov 1999; Case & Borodin 2000a).

We reexamined the syntypes of O. praecursor americana of Leriche (1942: 45, pl. 3, figs 6–13) to determine the validity of this subspecies. A comparison of these eight syntypes (USNM 366462 to USNM 366469) to teeth within recent jaw sets of the extant Isurus oxyrinchus (Rafinesque, 1810) suggests to us that Leriche’s (1942) differential characteristics (higher root, narrower crown, and more divergent root lobes) can all be attributed to heterodonty (dignathic, monognathic, and ontogenetic) and intraspecific variation. Thus, it is our opinion that the americana morphology is a junior synonym of Macrorhizodus praecursor , and we dispense with the subspecies name and refer all the specimens in our sample to M. praecursor . The specimens in our sample differ from those of Macrorhizodus nolfi Zhelezko & Kozlov, 1999 by having smooth enameloid shoulders and by lacking vestigial cusplets ( Carlsen & Cuny 2014). Finally, although Glickman (1964) placed M. praecursor within its own family, the Lamiostomatidae , we follow Nelson et al. (2016) in placing this taxon within the Lamnidae .

Stratigraphic and geographic range in Alabama

The specimens in our sample were collected from the lower Tallahatta Formation at site ADl-1, the contact of the Tallahatta and Lisbon formations at site ACov-11, the “upper” Lisbon Formation at site ACl-3, the contact of the Lisbon Formation and Gosport Sand at site AMo-4, and the Gosport Sand at sites ACl-15 and ACh-21. Upper Ypresian to middle Bartonian, zones NP14 to NP17.

Bassani F. 1877. Nuovi squalidi fossili. Atti della Societa Toscana di Scienze Naturali, Memoir 3: 77 - 82.

Carlsen A. W. & Cuny G. 2014. A study of the sharks and rays from the Lillebaelt Clay (early-middle Eocene) of Denmark, and their palaeoecology. Bulletin of the Geological Society of Denmark 62: 39 - 88.

Case G. R. 1980. A selachian fauna from the Trent Formation, lower Miocene (Aquitanian) of Eastern North Carolina. Palaeontographica Abteilung A 171 (1 - 3): 75 - 103.

Case G. R. & Borodin P. D. 2000 a. Late Eocene selachians from Irwinton Sand Member of the Barnwell Formation (Jacksonian), WKA mines, Gordon, Wilkinson Country, Georgia. Munchner Geowissenschaftliche Abhandlungen (A) 39: 5 - 16.

Glikman L. S. 1964. [Sharks of Paleogene and their Stratigraphic Significance]. Nauka Press, Moscow. [In Russian.]

Leriche M. 1905. Les poissons eocenes de la Belgique. Memoires du Musee royal d'Histoire naturelle de Belgique 3 (11): 49 - 228.

Leriche M. 1942. Contribution a l'etude des faunes ichthyologiques marines des terrains tertiaires de la Plaine cotiere atlantique et du centre des Etats-Unis. Les synchronismes des formations tertiaires des deux cotes de l'Atlantique. Memoires de la Societe geologique de France 45 (2 - 4): 1 - 110.

Mustafa H. A. & Zalmout I. S. 2002. Elasmobranchs from the late Eocene Wadi Esh-Shallala Formation of Qa'Faydat and Dahikiya, east Jordan. Tertiary Research 21 (1 - 4): 77 - 94.

Nelson J. S., Grande T. C. & Wilson M. V. H. 2016. Fishes of the World, 5 th Edition. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken.

Thurmond J. T. & Jones D. E. 1981. Fossil Vertebrates of Alabama. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.

Ward D. J. & Wiest R. L. 1990. A checklist of Palaeocene and Eocene sharks and rays (Chondrichthyes) from the Pamunkey Group, Maryland and Virginia, USA. Tertiary Research 12 (2): 81 - 88.

White E. I. 1931. The Vertebrate Faunas of the English Eocene: Vol. 1. From the Thanet Sands to the Basement Bed of the London Clay. British Museum (Natural History), London. https: // doi. org / 10.1017 / S 0016756800095820

White E. I. 1956. The Eocene fishes of Alabama. Bulletins of American Paleontology 36 (156): 123 - 150.

Zharkov M. P., Glikman L. S. & Kaplan A. A. 1976. [On the age of the Paleogene of Kaliningrad region]. Proceedings of the USSR Academy of Science, Geological Series 1: 132 - 134. [In Russian.]

Zhelezko V. I. & Kozlov V. A. 1999. [Elasmobranchii and Palaeogene biostratigraphy of Transural and Central Asia]. Materialy po stratigrafii i paleontologii Urala 3: 1 - 324. [In Russian.]

Gallery Image

Fig. 20. Macrorhizodus praecursor (Leriche, 1905), teeth. A–C. MSC 35759, anterior tooth, lower Tallahatta Formation. A. Labial view. B. Lingual view. C. Distal view. D–F. MSC 37174, anterolateral tooth, Tallahatta/Lisbon formation contact zone, courtesy of James Lowery. D. Labial view. E. Lingual view. F. Mesial view. G–I. MSC 37500, lateral tooth, Gosport Sand. G. Labial view. H. Lingual view. I. Mesial view. J–L. MSC 34585, anterior tooth, Gosport Sand. J. Labial view. K. Lingual view. L. Distal view. Scale bars = 1 cm.

ALMNH

Alabama Museum of Natural History

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Elasmobranchii

SubClass

Euselachii

SuperOrder

Galeomorphii

Order

Lamniformes

SubOrder

Orectoloboidei

SuperFamily

Orectoloboidea

Family

Lamiostomatidae

Genus

Macrorhizodus