Perplexicervix microcephalon, Mayr, 2010

Mayr, Gerald, 2010, A New Avian Species with Tubercle-bearing Cervical Vertebrae from the Middle Eocene of Messel (Germany), Records of the Australian Museum 62 (1), pp. 21-28 : 22-27

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3853/j.0067-1975.62.2010.1537

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/044E7574-074F-FFFA-1C1C-FF28FE13F84D

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Perplexicervix microcephalon
status

n.gen. and n.sp.

Perplexicervix microcephalon n.gen. and n.sp.

Holotype. SMF-ME 11211 a+b (partially dissociated skeleton lacking the left leg; Fig. 1a View Figure 1 ).

Referred specimens. SMF-ME 3548 (skull with atlas, axis, and third vertebra; Fig. 2a View Figure 2 ), SMF-ME 10846a+b (skull and cranialmost six cervical vertebrae; Fig. 2c View Figure 2 ), SMF 2559a+b (partial postcranial skeleton; Fig. 3 View Figure 3 ), HLMD-Me 14996a+b (postcranial skeleton; Fig. 1b View Figure 1 ). There is a further, uncatalogued skeleton of Perplexicervix microcephalon in the collection of B. Pohl (Gross-Bieberau, Germany), which also exhibits numerous tubercles on the cervical vertebrae ( Fig. 4 View Figure 4 ).

Type locality and horizon. Messel near Darmstadt, Germany; lower Middle Eocene ( MP 11; about 47 Ma).

Diagnosis. As for genus.

Measurements. SMF-ME 11211a+b (holotype): Skull, 56.6; humerus ca. 73 (right; visible through the transparent reverse of the slab); ulna, ca. 85 (right), 79.5 (right); carpometacarpus, 40.5 (left), ca. 40 (right); femur, 45.2 (right); tibiotarsus, ca. 71 (?) (right; calculated by adding the lengths of the two broken halves); tarsometatarsus, ca. 60 (?) (right; calculated by adding the lengths of the two broken halves); pedal phalanges: I1, ca. 11.0. SMF 2559a+b: humerus, 80.9 (left); ulna, 84.0 (left); carpometacarpus, 43.0 (left); tibiotarsus, ca. 74.7 (left), ca. 81.0 (right). HLMD-Me 14996a+b: humerus, ca. 80.5 (left), ca. 82 (right); ulna, ca. 85–87 (right); carpometacarpus, ca. 43.5 (right); femur, ca. 46.5 (left), ca. 45 (right); tibiotarsus, ca. 75.5 (left), ca. 75.5 (right); tarsometatarsus, ca. 52 (left), ca. 51.5 (right); pedal phalanges (HLMD-Me 14996a): I1, ca. 12.5 (right); I2, ca. 5 (right); II1, ca. 13.5 (?) (left); III1, ca. 13 (left); III2, ca. 8.5 (left); IV1, ca. 6.5 (?) (left); IV2, ca. 4.5 (left). Pohl specimen: Skull, ca. 61; humerus, ca. 73 (left), ca. 80 (right); ulna, 86.5 (right); carpometacarpus, 40.2 (left); tibiotarsus, ca. 73 (right); tarsometatarsus ca. 51.5 (right). SMF-ME 10846a: Skull, 56.5. SMF-ME 3548: Skull, 66.5.

Etymology. Derived from micro (Gr.): small, and cephalon (Gr.): head, in reference to the small skull of the new species.

Description and comparisons

As in the Anhimidae (Anseriformes) , Galliformes and Columbiformes, the skull is very small in relation to the body. It is also of similar overall proportions to the skull of the Anhimidae and, in dorsal view, becomes gradually narrower towards the tip of the beak. The beak itself is short and, in dorsal view, has a triangular shape. In lateral view (SMF-ME 10846a), it is rather low dorsoventrally, with a straight culmen, sigmoid tomia, and a slightly hooked tip. The narial openings are very long and almost reach into the tip of the beak. The ossa maxillaria are widely separated.

The ventral surface of the skull is exposed in SMF-ME 3548. In this specimen well-developed processus basipterygoidei can be discerned which resemble those of the Cathartidae . The caudal wall of the cavum tympanicum forms a cone-like projection, just caudal to the alae parasphenoidales (SMF-ME 3548), which indicates that the fossa parabasalis, i.e., the depression in which the ostia canalis carotici et ophthalmicus externus are located, was laterally open. Also in SMF-ME 3548, a tuba auditiva communis can be discerned and the lamina parasphenoidalis bears marked pores. As noted previously ( Mayr, 2007), there are some low and blunt bony tubercles on the basicranium of SMF-ME 3548. The processus parasphenoidales laterales are well developed.

Perplexicervix microcephalon lacks processus supraorbitales. In the holotype, the dorsal surface of the cranium appears to be elevated caudal of the orbitae, and is contrasted from the rostral portion by a distinct, V-shaped step ( Fig. 2b View Figure 2 ). Although this may be an artifact of preservation, the symmetry of this feature rather indicates that it reflects the true morphology of the cranium, i.e., that either the caudal portion of the cranium was unusually elevated or the rostral portion depressed. In all specimens, the surface of the cranium exhibits large pores and marked furrows (see also Mayr, 2007).

The processus postorbitalis is short, the processus zygomaticus wide, square, and with a truncated tip as in Cathartidae . As far as this can be discerned in the crushed skulls, the fossae temporales appear to have been shallow.

In SMF-ME 3548 the processus oticus of the left quadratum can bee seen in cranial view ( Mayr, 2007: fig. 2a), whereas only a small portion of the capitulum oticum of the right quadratum is visible. The processus oticus resembles that of the White-tailed Kite Elanus leucurus (Accipitridae) ; as in the latter, the articulation facet of the capitulum oticum extends onto the cranial surface of the processus oticus. The incisura intercapitularis is very shallow.

The rami mandibulae are dorsoventrally narrow and particularly slender in their distal half; the pars symphysialis (visible through the reverse of the transparent slab of SMF-ME 11211a) is very short, its length is about equal to the depth of the narrow distal section of the rami mandibulae. Fenestrae mandibulae are absent. The caudal part of the mandible bears a well-developed processus medialis.

The cervical vertebrae of section II of Boas (1929) are long and exhibit shallow lacunae interzygapophysiales and elongate, ridge-like processus spinosi (SMF-ME 10846a). At least the fourth cervical vertebra lacks an osseous bridge from the processus transversus to the processus articularis caudalis (arcus interzygapophysialis of Livezey & Zusi, 2006:133) (SMF-ME 10846a). Whether this bridge was present on the third cervical vertebra cannot be clearly discerned (SMF-ME 10846a)—if it was, the enclosed foramen must have been very small. In all specimens except HLMD-Me 14996a+b, in which they are not preserved, the cervical vertebrae are densely covered with numerous small tubercles ( Fig. 2 View Figure 2 ). The morphology of these tubercles in the referred specimens SMF-ME 10846 and SMF-ME 3548 was described by Mayr (2007), and this description also matches the tubercles in the other specimens. In the privately owned specimen in the Pohl collection it can be seen that the tubercles cover the first nine cervical vertebrae ( Fig. 4 View Figure 4 ). The thoracic vertebrae lack tubercles. As in extant Anhimidae , they exhibit a pneumatic foramen on the lateral surface of the corpus (SMF-ME 11211a, SMF-ME 2559a; Fig. 3c View Figure 3 ).

The robust and broadly rounded processus acrocoracoideus of the right coracoid can be seen in ventral view in HLMD-Me 14996a ( Fig. 5a View Figure 5 ); in its shape it resembles the processus acrocoracoideus of the Otididae . Although only a small portion of the dorsal surface of the extremitas sternalis is visible in HLMD-Me 14996b, distinct muscle striae can be discerned.

The cranial end of the left scapula is exposed in lateral view in HLMD-Me 14996b ( Fig. 5b View Figure 5 ). The acromion is short and there is a well-developed tuberculum coracoideum which indicates the presence of a cup-like cotyla scapularis on the coracoid.

In the holotype only the poorly preserved distal portions of the humeri are visible, and more details of the bone can be discerned in SMF-ME 2559 a and HLMD-Me 14996a+b. Being fairly elongate, with a rather narrow proximal and a wide distal end, it resembles the humerus of the Cathartidae in its proportions. There crista deltopectoralis is long but not very prominent, and there seems to have been a convex crista bicipitalis (HLMD-Me 14996a, left side). The small tuberculum dorsale is visible on the left humerus of HLMD-Me 14996b. The distal end only allows the recognition of the ventrally protruding epicondylus ventralis, which bears two marked pits on its ventral surface (HLMD-Me 14996a, SMF-ME 2559 a) .

The ulna exceeds the other limb bones in length, but only few details of its articular ends can be discerned. The cotyla ventralis seems to have been shallow and the olecranon is short ( SMF-ME 11211 a, SMF-ME 2559 a). In the holotype, the poorly preserved distal end of the left ulna is exposed in ventral view and allows the recognition of a short condylus dorsalis and a small tuberculum carpale. The small condylus dorsalis can also be seen on the right ulna of HLMD-Me 14996a and in SMF-ME 2559 a.

The carpometacarpus is slender and fairly long, of similar overall proportions to that of Cathartidae . The prominent processus extensorius has a broadly rounded tip ( Fig. 5d View Figure 5 ) and resembles that of the Turkey Vulture, Cathartes aura . The os metacarpale minor is straight, the spatium intermetacarpale narrow, and the symphysis metacarpalis distalis fairly long.

The phalanx digiti alulae is long and lacks an ungual phalanx. The phalanx proximalis digiti majoris exhibits a small processus internus indicis of similar shape to that of Cathartes aura (SMF-ME 11211a).

The pelvis of SMF-ME 11211a is visible in ventral view. There are low tubercles on what I consider to be a portion of the left ischium.

The femur of the holotype bears tubercles on the lateral surface of the proximal end and the midsection of the shaft. Although these are somewhat less pronounced than the tubercles on the cervical vertebrae, they are nevertheless very distinct. Such tubercles are absent on the corresponding parts of the fairly well-preserved femora of the referred specimen HLMD-Me 14996a+b.

The tibiotarsus of the holotype is broken in its distal part and the two portions are displaced against each other, thus probably indicating a fracture rather than a breakage due to diagenetic processes. The cristae cnemiales are well developed, and the crista cnemialis cranialis appears to have been proximally protruding ( SMF-ME 2559 a, right tibiotarsus). The condyles are widely separated and dorsoventrally low, the condylus medialis being smaller than the condylus lateralis; whether an ossified pons supratendineus was present cannot be discerned ( SMF-ME 2559 a) .

The tarsometatarsus of the holotype is broken in its distal fourth and the two parts are dislocated and turned against each other ( Fig. 6a View Figure 6 ); the proximal portion of the bone is visible in plantar view, whereas the dorsal surface of the distal fragment is exposed. In HLMD-Me 14996a+b the left tarsometatarsus is embedded in a dorsoventral position, whereas the right one can be seen in mediolateral view.

The tarsometatarsus of P. microcephalon is long and slender, the shaft of equal width over most of its length, becoming only slightly narrower distally. The distal end itself is wide and appears to have had a fairly symmetrical shape, with short trochleae metatarsorum II et IV. The hypotarsus is visible through the reverse of the transparent slab of SMF-ME 11211 a, but in this specimen it can only be discerned that it bears wide and shallow grooves. The better preserved plantar surface of the left hypotarsus is visible in HLMD-Me 14996b. It has a triangular outline and bears two low ridges, the lateral one of which is larger, and in the medial portion there is a small, nearly closed sulcus. The foramen vasculare distale cannot be discerned in HLMD-Me 14996; in the holotype, there is a large ovate opening in the area of this foramen which does, however, not perforate the bone and seems to be a preparation artifact .

In the holotype only a resin mould of the long hallux is preserved, and in HLMD-Me 14996a+b the toes are badly deformed, which makes it difficult to discern the length of some phalanges ( Fig. 6b View Figure 6 ). However, at least the proximal phalanges of the second and third toes are of average proportions. Next to the lateral side of the left tarsometatarsus of HLMD-Me 14996a, there is a narrow elongate bone, which I interpret as the os metatarsale I.

In SMF-ME 11211a faint shadows of the right wing feathers are visible and, as preserved, the outermost primary measures about 110 mm. Remains of the long wing feathers are also preserved in HLMD-Me 14996a+b, but do not allow a meaningful description.

SMF

Forschungsinstitut und Natur-Museum Senckenberg

MP

Mohonk Preserve, Inc.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Aves

Genus

Perplexicervix

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