SCAPHOKOGIINAE Muizon, 1988

COLLARETA, Alberto, LAMBERT, Olivier, MUIZON, Christian de, BENITES PALOMINO, Aldo Marcelo, URBINA, Mario & BIANUCCI, Giovanni, 2020, A new physeteroid from the late Miocene of Peru expands the diversity of extinct dwarf and pygmy sperm whales (Cetacea: Odontoceti: Kogiidae), Comptes Rendus Palevol 19 (5), pp. 79-100 : 83

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/cr-palevol2020v19a5

publication LSID

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DB4BC4A0-E559-49AD-9452-55F1688D99DA

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14220022

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/390387B2-0B77-FFA1-C3E0-F827FAE92811

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

SCAPHOKOGIINAE Muizon, 1988
status

 

Subfamily SCAPHOKOGIINAE Muizon, 1988

EMENDED DIAGNOSIS. — Scaphokogiinae are recognized as Kogiidae by the following combination of characters: strongly asymmetric skull in dorsal view; relatively small skull size (i.e., bizygomatic width <40 cm); presence of a broad supracranial basin that extends over most of the dorsal surface of the neurocranium; external nares greatly asymmetric; absence of both nasals; presence of a sagittal facial crest; and right maxilla reaching the sagittal plane of the skull on the posterior wall of the supracranial basin.

Scaphokogiinae differ from all other kogiids by the following presumed autapomorphies: on the right side of the skull, maxillapremaxilla suture distinctly anterolaterally directed anterior to the antorbital notch; lateral maxillary crests high, vertical, and plate-like (c. 5[1]); nuchal crest strongly shifted backwards in lateral view; occipital shield flat or concave in lateral view, forming an angle distinctly greater than 90° with the long axis of the rostrum (c. 30[3]); supracranial basin deep to very deep and spoon-shaped; right anterolateral border of the supracranial basin marked by a distinct supracranial step; absence of distinct premaxillary or peripheral fossae within the supracranial basin; right premaxilla covering a small fraction (i.e., less than 1/ ª) of the total area of the supracranial basin. They are further diagnosed by the following combination of characters: right premaxilla neither reaching, nor even approaching the occipital crest (shared with Aprixokogia Whitmore & Kaltenbach, 2008 ); presence of discrete dental alveoli on the maxilla (shared with Aprixokogia , Koristocetus Collareta, Lambert, Muizon, Urbina & Bianucci, 2017 and, possibly, Pliokogia Collareta, Cigala Fulgosi & Bianucci, 2019 ; condition unknown in Praekogia and Thalassocetus Abel, 1905 ); antorbital notches not opening onto the supracranial basin (shared with Aprixokogia and Thalassocetus ); antorbital notches forming a narrow slit (shared with Nanokogia Vélez-Juarbe, Wood, De Gracia & Hendy, 2015 , Kogia View in CoL , Koristocetus , Pliokogia and, possibly, Praekogia Barnes, 1973 ); lateral maxillary crests mediolaterally thin (shared with Koristocetus , Nanokogia and Praekogia ); posterodorsal corner of the lacrimojugal complex shaped as a pointed process that wedges between the maxilla and the frontal (shared with Kogia View in CoL , Nanokogia , Pliokogia , and Praekogia ; condition unknown in Thalassocetus ); and presphenoid not covered by the vomer in ventral view (shared with Aprixokogia , Kogia View in CoL , Nanokogia , and Pliokogia ; condition unknown in Thalassocetus ).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Cetacea

SubOrder

Odontoceti

SuperFamily

Physeteroidea

Family

Kogiidae

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