Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-7drxs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-18T20:55:24.957Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bite marks on early Holocene Tursiops truncatus fossils from the North Sea indicate scavenging by rays (Chondrichthyes, Rajidae)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 March 2014

H.H. van Netten
Affiliation:
Utrecht University, Faculty of Geosciences, Budapestlaan 4, P.O. Box 80021, 3508 TA Utrecht, the Netherlands
J.W.F. Reumer*
Affiliation:
Utrecht University, Faculty of Geosciences, Budapestlaan 4, P.O. Box 80021, 3508 TA Utrecht, the Netherlands Natural History Museum Rotterdam, Westzeedijk 345, P.O. Box 23452, 3001 KL Rotterdam, the Netherlands
*
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

A number of Tursiops truncatus mandibles in the collection of fossil marine mammals in the Rotterdam Natural History Museum have marks consisting of several parallel linear grooves. These marks are also found on four atlas complexes, a scapula and on one vertebra. The hypothesis that they are bite marks and were caused by scavenging rays (Rajidae, Chondrichthyes) was tested with a real-life experiment using different shark and ray species, allowing them to scavenge on cow ribs as proxies for the dolphin bones. The bite marks of these animals were compared with the fossil marks and show that the fossil marks are most likely caused by scavenging rays.

Type
Geo(Im)pulse
Copyright
Copyright © Stichting Netherlands Journal of Geosciences 2009

References

Bosscha Erdbrink, D.P. & Van Bree, P.J.H., 1986. Fossil Odobenidae in some Dutch collections (Mammalia, Carnivora). Beaufortia 36: 1333.Google Scholar
De Man, J.C., 1875. Beenderen van den Mammouth en van het uitgestorven rund, opgevischt in den omtrek van Zeeland. Archief Zeeuwsch Genootschap der Wetenschappen 3(2): 101127.Google Scholar
De Vos, J., Mol, D. & Reumer, J.W.F., 1998. Early Pleistocene mammalian remains from the Oosterschelde or Eastern Scheldt (province of Zeeland, the Netherlands). Mededelingen Nederlands Instituut voor Toegepaste Geowetenschappen TNO 60: 173185.Google Scholar
Fischer, J.W. Jr, 1995. Bone surface modifications in zooarchaeology. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 2(1): 768.Google Scholar
Kortenbout van der Sluijs, G., 1971. Bones of mammals from the Brown Bank area (North Sea). In: Louwe Kooijmans, L.P., (ed.): Mesolithic bone and antler implements from the North Sea and from the Netherlands. Berichten van de Rijksdienst voor het Oudheidkundig Bodemonderzoek 20–21: 6970.Google Scholar
Mol, D., Post, K., Reumer, J.W.F., Van der Plicht, J., De Vos, J., Van Geel, B., Van Reenen, G., Pals, J.P. & Glimmerveen, J., 2006. The Eurogeul-First report of the palaeontological, palynological and archaeological investigations of this part of the North Sea. Quaternary International 142–143: 178185.Google Scholar
Mol, D., De Vos, J., Bakker, R., Van Geel, B., Glimmerveen, J., Van der Plicht, H. & Post, K., 2008. Kleine encyclopedie van het leven in het Pleistoceen. Mammoeten, neushoorns en andere dieren van de Noordzeebodem. Natuurwetenschap & Techniek, part of Veen Magazine, Diemen.Google Scholar
Post, K., 2005. A Weichselian marine mammal assemblage from the southern North Sea. Deinsea 11: 2127.Google Scholar
Reumer, J.W.F., Rook, L, Van der Borg, K., Post, K., Mol, D. & De Vos, J., 2003. Late Pleistocene Survival of the Sabre-toothed Cat Homotherium in Northwestern Europe. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 23 (1): 260262.Google Scholar
Rothschild, B.M., Martin, L.D. & Schulp, A.S., 2005. Sharks eating Mosasaurs, dead or alive? Netherlands Journal of Geosciences / Geologie en Mijnbouw 84(3): 335340.Google Scholar
Schwimmer, D.R., Stewart, J.D. & Williams, G.D., 1997. Scavenging by Sharks of the Genus Squalicorax in the Late Cretaceous of North America. Palaios 12(1): 7183.Google Scholar
Shennan, I., Lambeck, K., Flather, R., Horton, B., McArthur, J., Innes, J., Lloyd, J., Rutherford, M. & Wingfield, R., 2000. Modelling western North Sea palaeogeographies and tidal changes during the Holocene. In: Shennan, I. & Andrews, J., (eds): Holocene Land-Ocean Interaction and Environmental Change around the North Sea. Special Publication 166, Geological Society Publishing House, Bath: 299319.Google Scholar
Shimada, K. & Hooks, G.E. III, 2004. Shark-bitten protostegid turtles from the Upper Cretaceous Mooreville Chalk, Alabama. Journal of Paleontology 78(1): 205210.Google Scholar
Waller, M.P. & Long, A.J., 2003. Holocene coastal evolution and sea-level change on the southern coast of England: a review. Journal of Quaternary Science 18(3–4): 351359.Google Scholar