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| DOI | 10.1186/S13358-021-00228-W | ||||
| Año | 2021 | ||||
| Tipo | artículo de investigación |
Citas Totales
Autores Afiliación Chile
Instituciones Chile
% Participación
Internacional
Autores
Afiliación Extranjera
Instituciones
Extranjeras
Few fossil fish otolith associations have been described from the Pacific side of the Americas and, except for a single species (Steindachneria svennielseni), none have been described from Pacific South America south of the Central American tropical region. Here, we describe a rich otolith assemblage obtained from fifteen early Miocene outcrop locations along the Chilean coast from about 33°S to about 45°S. More than 2,000 specimens were studied resulting in the recognition of 67 species, with 27 being new to science. This assemblage represents an important new data point distant from any previously known otolith-based fish fauna, with the nearest coeval associations being from the Caribbean Province in Venezuela, which lies about 5000 km to the north, and New Zealand, which is about 9000 km to the west. The fauna represents a mixture of offshore and shallow water fishes and is rich in myctophids, paralichthyids (Citharichthys), ophidiids (Lepophidium), steindachneriids, and macrourids. Typical tropical American fishes are nearly completely absent, with the exception of Steindachneria and certain anguilliforms. The mesopelagic faunal component, chiefly Myctophidae, shows a striking resemblance to the well-known coeval fish fauna from New Zealand, and both are interpreted as representing an early South Pacific mesopelagic bioprovince. The strong correlation with the mesopelagic otolith-based fish fauna from New Zealand constricts the time interval of the sampled sediments to the middle Burdigalian (approximately 17.5 to 18.5 Ma). All otoliths obtained from the early Miocene of Chile relate to extant fish groups of the area and few exotic components not currently present in the East Pacific. The sole exception is a morpho-type described as Navidadichthys which has an unresolved relationship, possibly with the Prototroctidae, a family that is today endemic to the freshwater and nearshore marine environments of Australia and New Zealand. The new taxa are in the sequence of taxonomic description: Pterothrissus transpacificus n. sp., Pythonichthys panulus n. sp., Chiloconger chilensis n. sp., Gnathophis quinzoi n.sp., Rhynchoconger chiloensis n. sp., Navidadichthys mirus n. gen. et n. sp., Maurolicus brevirostris n. sp., Polyipnus bandeli n. sp., Lampanyctus ipunensis n. sp., Physiculus pichi n. sp., Coelorinchus fidelis n. sp., Coelorinchus rapelanus n. sp., Nezumia epuge n. sp., Paracarapus chilensis n. gen. et n. sp., Lepophidium chonorum n. sp., Lepophidium mapucheorum n. sp., Sirembola supersa n. sp., Spectrunculus sparsus n. sp., Pseudonus humilis n. sp., Capromimus undulatus n. sp., Agonopsis cume n. sp., Cottunculus primaevus n. sp., Kuhlia orientalis n. sp., Citharichthys parvisulcus n. sp., Citharichthys vergens n. sp., Achirus australis n. sp., Achirus chungkuz n. sp.
| Ord. | Autor | Género | Institución - País |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Schwarzhans, Werner W. | Hombre |
Københavns Universitet - Dinamarca
Ahrensburger Weg 103 - Alemania Univ Copenhagen - Dinamarca Statens Naturhistoriske Museum - Dinamarca |
| 2 | Nielsen, Sven N. | Hombre |
Universidad Austral de Chile - Chile
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| Fuente |
|---|
| Southwestern Medical Foundation |
| ANID/FONDECYT |
| Gerald Allen |
| BSKU |
| Ekaterina Vasilieva |
| Singapore Millennium Foundation |
| BMNH |
| ZMMGU |
| Gento Shinohara and Eri Katayama |
| Oliver Crimmen and James Maclaine |
| Hiromitsu Endo and Naohide Nakayama |
| ZMUC |
| Friedhelm Krupp |
| NSMT |
| Agradecimiento |
|---|
| The senior author is very thankful for the support of many colleagues received over many years from the following institutions: Mark McGrouther and John Paxton (AMS, Sydney), Oliver Crimmen and James Maclaine (BMNH, London), Hiromitsu Endo and Naohide Nakayama (BSKU, Kochi), David Catania (CAS, San Francisco), Rick Feeney and Christine Thacker (LACM, Los Angeles), Karsten Hartel (MCZ, Boston), Philippe Béarez (MNHN, Paris), Hsuang-Ching Ho (NMMBA, Pingtung, Taiwan), Carl Struthers (NMNZ, Wellington), Gento Shinohara and Eri Katayama (NSMT, Tokio), Fumio Ohe (Seto, Japan), Rolly McKay (QM, Brisbane), Friedhelm Krupp (SMF, Frankfurt/Main), Ronald Fricke (SMNS, Stuttgart), Jeffrey Williams and David Smith (USNM, Washington D.C.), Gerald Allen and Sue Morrison (WAM, Perth), Alfred Post and Ralf Thiel (ZMH including former FBH and ISH, Hamburg), Ekaterina Vasilieva (ZMMGU, Moscow), Jørgen Nielsen and Peter Møller (ZMUC, Copenhagen). We thank Nicole Colin (UACh, Valdivia) for otoliths of the extant Aplochiton taeniatus. We further thank the reviewers of the manuscript for their constructive recommendations and the editors for the handling of the manuscript. |
| This work benefitted from funding of projects ANID/Fondecyt 1150664 "Miocene diversity along the coast of central to southern Chile across multiple taxa" to SNN, ANID/Fondecyt 1200843 "A network-theory approach to understanding the paleobiogeographic dynamics of marine bivalves of the southeastern Pacific across the late Cenozoic" to Marcelo Rivadeneira (CEAZA, Coquimbo), and ANID/Fondecyt 1110914 "Age, sedimentary environment and paleobathymetry of the Neogene marine successions in the forearc of southcentral Chile between Guafo Island and the Golfo de Penas (43 degrees 30'-48 degrees S)" to Alfonso Encinas (UdeC, Concepcion). Collecting was authorized by Consejo de Monumentos Nacionales de Chile permit numbers 003867 and 003868. |