4.5 Article

Neurovascular evidence for a co-occurrence of teeth and baleen in an Oligocene mysticete and the transition to filter-feeding in baleen whales

Journal

ZOOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY
Volume 194, Issue 2, Pages 395-415

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS

Keywords

anatomy; comparative anatomy; cranium; morphology; Oligocene; osteological correlate; skull anatomy; soft-tissue reconstruction; vertebrate palaeontology

Categories

Funding

  1. Eleanor [SDSNH 21212]

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Through the study of fossils and CT imaging, it has been shown that teeth and baleen coexisted in ancient toothed mysticetes and that they shared the same neurovascular system. These findings are crucial for understanding the transition from teeth to baleen in whales and the evolution of filter-feeding.
Extant baleen whales (Mysticeti) have a deciduous foetal dentition, but are edentulous at birth. Fossils reveal that the earliest mysticetes possessed an adult dentition. Aetiocetids, a diverse Glade of Oligocene toothed mysticetes, have a series of small palatal foramina and associated sulci medial to the postcanine dentition. The openings have been homologized with lateral palatal foramina that transmit neurovascular structures to baleen in extant mysticetes, thereby implying a co-occurrence of teeth and baleen in aetiocetids. However, homology of the foramina and sulci have been questioned. Using CT-imaging, we report that the lateral palatal foramina of Aetiocetus weltoni are connected internally to the superior alveolar canal, which transmits neurovascular structures to baleen in extant mysticetes and to teeth in extant odontocetes. Furthermore, the lateral palatal foramina of Aetiocetus are separate from the more medially positioned canals for the greater palatine arterial system. These results provide critical evidence to support the hypothesis that the superior alveolar neurovasculature was co-opted in aetiocetids and later diverging mysticetes to serve a new function associated with baleen. We evaluate competing hypotheses for the transition from teeth to baleen, and explore the transition from raptorial feeding in early mysticetes to filter-feeding in extant species.

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