From limb to fin: an Eocene protocetid forelimb from Senegal sheds new light on the early locomotor evolution of cetaceans
收藏DataONE2019-09-23 更新2025-06-21 收录
下载链接:
https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:71671a2e7a1837dc073a89b818ccf43de11149b8412dd6dc6524dc8e522206b9
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
Cetaceans constitute a textbook example of the secondary adaptation of tetrapods to aquatic life. This major event in the evolutionary history of mammals is often linked in the literature to the limbâtoâfin transition. Paradoxically, limb bones are scarce in the fossil record of early cetaceans, and the transition from a limbâadapted morphology for an amphibious life in shallow water to a finâadapted morphology for a pelagic lifestyle remains poorly documented. Here, we describe new protocetid remains from the upper Lutetian of Senegal, including a nearly complete articulated forelimb. A cladistic analysis including 24 taxa and 137 morphological characters recovers the new African specimen close to Carolinacetus. It also confirms that cetacean dispersal to the New World was not the result of a single colonization event. A 3D model of the forelimb was reconstructed. Anatomical comparisons suggest that it is unlikely that the Senegalese forelimb was used as a rigid pectoral flipper for st...
创建时间:
2025-06-17



