Re-submission, due to problem with the mailing-list.


________________________________
From: Felix Marx <[email protected]>
Sent: September 6, 2017 3:25 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: New paper on tooth sharpness and the origin of baleen whale filter 
feeding

Dear colleagues,

please find below the abstract and link to our recently published paper on 
tooth sharpness and the origin of filter feeding in archaic baleen whales:

Hocking, D. P., Marx, F. G., Fitzgerald, E. M. G., Evans, A. R. 2017 Ancient 
whales did not filter feed with their teeth. Biology Letters 13: 20170348.

Link: http://rsbl.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/13/8/20170348

Abstract: The origin of baleen whales (Mysticeti), the largest animals on 
Earth, is closely tied to their signature filter-feeding strategy. Unlike their 
modern relatives, archaic whales possessed a well-developed, heterodont adult 
dentition. How these teeth were used, and what role their function and 
subsequent loss played in the emergence of filter feeding, is an enduring 
mystery. In particular, it has been suggested that elaborate tooth crowns may 
have enabled stem mysticetes to filter with their postcanine teeth in a manner 
analogous to living crabeater and leopard seals, thereby facilitating the 
transition to baleen-assisted filtering. Here we show that the teeth of archaic 
mysticetes are as sharp as those of terrestrial carnivorans, raptorial 
pinnipeds and archaeocetes, and thus were capable of capturing and processing 
prey. By contrast, the postcanine teeth of leopard and crabeater seals are 
markedly blunter, and clearly unsuited to raptorial feeding. Our results 
suggest that mysticetes never passed through a tooth-based filtration phase, 
and that the use of teeth and baleen in early whales was not functionally 
connected. Continued selection for tooth sharpness in archaic mysticetes is 
best explained by a feeding strategy that included both biting and suction, 
similar to that of most living pinnipeds and, probably, early toothed whales 
(Odontoceti).

Kind regards,

Felix Marx
_____________________________

Felix G. Marx PhD
Marie Sklodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellow
*Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Brussels, Belgium
*Monash University, Melbourne, Australia
*Museum Victoria, Melbourne, Australia

Address: School of Biological Sciences, Monash University
18 Innovation Walk, VIC 3800, Australia
Tel. +61 (0)3 9905 1190 (Monash University) or +61 (0)3 8341 7346 (Museum 
Victoria)

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