Univ Rennes, CNRS, Géosciences Rennes, UMR 6118, Rennes, France.
Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde Karlsruhe, Karlsruhe, Germany.
Science. 2021 Mar 19;371(6535):1253-1256. doi: 10.1126/science.abc1490.
The ecomorphological diversity of extinct elasmobranchs is incompletely known. Here, we describe , a bizarre probable planktivorous shark from early Late Cretaceous open marine deposits in Mexico. , tentatively assigned to Lamniformes, is characterized by hypertrophied, slender pectoral fins. This previously unknown body plan represents an unexpected evolutionary experimentation with underwater flight among sharks, more than 30 million years before the rise of manta and devil rays (Mobulidae), and shows that winglike pectoral fins have evolved independently in two distantly related clades of filter-feeding elasmobranchs. This newly described group of highly specialized long-winged sharks (Aquilolamnidae) displays an aquilopelagic-like ecomorphotype and may have occupied, in late Mesozoic seas, the ecological niche filled by mobulids and other batoids after the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary.
已灭绝的鲛形目动物的生态形态多样性尚未完全了解。本文描述了一种来自墨西哥早白垩世开阔海洋沉积物中的奇异的可能滤食性鲨鱼类,暂命名为 Lamniformes,其特征是特化的细长胸鳍。这种以前未知的身体形态代表了鲨鱼在水下飞行方面的一次出乎意料的进化实验,比蝠鲼目(Mobulidae)的出现早了 3000 多万年,表明翅状胸鳍已经在两个远缘的滤食性鲛形目鱼类分支中独立进化。这个新描述的高度特化长翅鲨类群(Aquilolamnidae)表现出一种类似于 Aquila 的海生生态类型,可能在白垩纪-古近纪之交后,占据了蝠鲼目和其他鳐形目动物所占据的海洋生态位。