Friday, 10 January 2025

Cochimicetus convexus: A new species of Eomysticetid Whale from the Late Oligocene of Baja California Sur, Mexico.

Baleen Whales, Mysticetes, are the largest Animals alive today, and, as far as we can tell, the largest Animals ever to have lived. They are able to achieve this huge size by a unique feeding mechanism; using a system of keratinaceous baleen plates  to filter food items (such as Crustaceans of small Fish) from the water. The largest Baleen Whales are lunge feeders, capable of engulfing whole shoals of prey-items, then  trapping them on the baleen plates as the accompanying water is pushed out through. The earliest Mysticetes appeared in the Late Eocene, though these were still Toothed Whales, little different from the ancestors of today's Odontocetes. The first true Baleen Whales were the Eomysticetids, a group which appeared in the Early Oligocene. Eomysticetids had baleen plates similar to those of modern Baleen Whales, but appear to have lacked the ability to lunge-feed in the same way, and were not capable of reaching the same sizes.

In a paper published in the journal Palaeontologica  Electronica in January 2025, Cielo Cedillo-Avila and Gerardo González-Barba of the Museo de Historia Natural at the Universidad Autónoma de Baja California Sur,  and Azucena Solis-Añorve, also of the  Museo de Historia Natural, and of Posgrado of Ciencias Marinas and Costeras at the Universidad Autónoma de Baja California Sur, describe a new species of Eomysticetid Whale from the Late Oligocene San Gregorio Formation of Baja California Sur.

The new species is described from a single specimen comprisng a partially complete skull with a length of 147 cm, along with both mandibles and tympanic bulla. It is named Cochimicetus convexus, where 'Cochimicetus' refers to the indigenous Cochimi people, a nomadic group who once inhabited the northern part of Baja California Sur, and 'convexus' refers to the convex shape of the anterior tip of the tympanic bulla, which tends to be pointed in other Eomysticetid Whales.

Dorsal view of the holotype of Cochimicetus convexus. (A) Image showing the identified structures. (B) photography with scale 10 cm. Cedillo-Avila et al. (2025).

Cochimicetus convexus is the fourth species of Eomysticetid Whale from the Oligocene of Baja California Sur, demonstrating the importance of the area for our understanding of the early evolution of the Mysticetes. 

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