A new species of diminutive baleen whale that lived between 3.5 and 2.5 million years ago (Late Pliocene) has been described by U.S. paleontologists led by Dr Robert Boessenecker, from fossils found in California.
Artistic reconstruction of Herpetocetus morrowi in the late Pliocene Pacific Ocean off southern California. The fish depicted in the upper left is a sheephead, Semicossyphus sp. Image credit: Robert Boessenecker.
The newly discovered prehistoric species belongs to Herpetocetus, a genus of now extinct dwarf whales in the subfamily Herpetocetinae.
Until now, there were four recognized species in this genus: Herpetocetus transatlanticus, Herpetocetus scaldiensis, Herpetocetus bramblei and an unnamed species from Japan.
They lived during the period from the Late Miocene to the Pliocene in north Pacific and north Atlantic oceans.
Fossil specimens of the new species, named Herpetocetus morrowi, were recovered from the San Diego Formation, northern California.
Herpetocetus morrowi: lateral (top) and dorsal views (bottom) of the holotype skull, scale bar – 10 cm; inferred position of known bone elements of Herpetocetus morrowi within the body, and a human for comparison (middle). Image credit: Joseph J. El Adli et al.
According to a paper published in the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, Herpetocetus morrowi was one of the smallest known baleen whales.
It was about 4.5 meters long, had an elongated snout and a roughly quadrate skull.
Dr Boessenecker and his colleagues say that Herpetocetus morrowi may have employed a feeding strategy very similar to that of the gray whale (Eschrichtius robustus).
Source: sci.news