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Bony outgrowths on the jaws of an extinct sperm whale support macroraptorial feeding in several stem physeteroids
Authors:Olivier Lambert  Giovanni Bianucci  Brian L. Beatty
Affiliation:1. Direction Opérationnelle Terre et Histoire de la Vie, Institut Royal des Sciences Naturelles de Belgique, 29 rue Vautier, Brussels, 1000, Belgium
2. Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Università di Pisa, 53 via S. Maria, Pisa, 56126, Italy
3. NYIT College of Osteopathic Medicine, Northern Blvd, Old Westbury, NY, 11568, USA
4. Department of Paleobiology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, 20560, USA
5. Virginia Museum of Natural History, Martinsville, VA, 24112, USA
Abstract:Several extinct sperm whales (stem Physeteroidea) were recently proposed to differ markedly in their feeding ecology from the suction-feeding modern sperm whales Kogia and Physeter. Based on cranial, mandibular, and dental morphology, these Miocene forms were tentatively identified as macroraptorial feeders, able to consume proportionally large prey using their massive teeth and robust jaws. However, until now, no corroborating evidence for the use of teeth during predation was available. We report on a new specimen of the stem physeteroid Acrophyseter, from the late middle to early late Miocene of Peru, displaying unusual bony outgrowths along some of the upper alveoli. Considering their position and outer shape, these are identified as buccal maxillary exostoses. More developed along posterior teeth and in tight contact with the high portion of the dental root outside the bony alveoli, the exostoses are hypothesized to have developed during powerful bites; they may have worked as buttresses, strengthening the teeth when facing intense occlusal forces. These buccal exostoses further support a raptorial feeding technique for Acrophyseter and, indirectly, for other extinct sperm whales with a similar oral apparatus (Brygmophyseter, Livyatan, Zygophyseter). With a wide size range, these Miocene stem physeteroids were major marine macropredators, occupying ecological niches nowadays mostly taken by killer whales.
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