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A secondary nursery area for the copper shark Carcharhinus brachyurus from the late Miocene of Peru
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- The life history strategies of sharks often include the use of protected nursery areas by young-of-the-year and juveniles. Nursery areas can be primary (i.e., grounds where the sharks are born and spend the very first part of their lives) or secondary (i.e., grounds inhabited by slightly older but not yet mature individuals). Criteria utilized to recognize these strategic habitats include: high concentration of young sharks, high food availability, and low predation risk. Since the fossil record of sharks consists mainly of isolated teeth, identification of paleonurseries involves a series of problems due to difficult application of actualistic criteria. A rich shark tooth-bearing level (ST-low1) has recently been discovered in the upper Miocene deposits of the Pisco Formation exposed at Cerro Colorado (southern coast of Peru). Most of the teeth collected from this level belong to the extant copper shark Carcharhinus brachyurus. These teeth are small and compatible with those of extant juveniles. This observation, coupled with other paleoenvironmental considerations, indicates that the ST-low1 horizon could have represented a nursery ground for juvenile individuals of C. brachyurus. The absence of very small-sized teeth (i.e., referable to young-of-the-year) suggests a secondary nursery ground inhabited by immature copper sharks. Observations on the tooth size of other Lamniformes, Carcharhiniformes, and Myliobatiformes occurring along with C. brachyurus point to a significantly juvenile structure of this elasmobranch assemblage, thus supporting the hypothesis of a communal use of the Cerro Colorado paleonursery.
- Subjects :
- 010506 paleontology
Carcharhinidae
Cerro Colorado
Ecospace utilization
Paleoecology
Pisco Formation
Tortonian
Geology
Earth-Surface Processes
Biology
Late Miocene
010502 geochemistry & geophysics
01 natural sciences
Predation
stomatognathic system
Carcharhiniformes
Juvenile
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Myliobatiformes
Ecology
biology.organism_classification
Carcharhinus
Lamniformes
human activities
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....ffd14388f1355d31e1f101cdbf910b38