Cranial Remain from Tunisia Provides New Clues for the Origin and Evolution of Sirenia (Mammalia, Afrotheria) in Africa

  • Julien Benoit
  • Sylvain Adnet
  • Essid El Mabrouk
  • Hayet Khayati
  • Mustapha Ben
  • Haj Ali
  • Laurent Marivaux
  • Gilles Merzeraud
  • Samuel Merigeaud
  • Monique Vianey-liaud
  • Rodolphe Tabuce
Publication date
January 2013

Abstract

Sea cows (manatees, dugongs) are the only living marine mammals to feed solely on aquatic plants. Unlike whales or dolphins (Cetacea), the earliest evolutionary history of sirenians is poorly documented, and limited to a few fossils including skulls and skeletons of two genera composing the stem family of Prorastomidae (Prorastomus and Pezosiren). Surprisingly, these fossils come from the Eocene of Jamaica, while stem Hyracoidea and Proboscidea- the putative sister-groups to Sirenia- are recorded in Africa as early as the Late Paleocene. So far, the historical biogeography of early Sirenia has remained obscure given this paradox between phylogeny and fossil record. Here we use X-ray microtomography to investigate a newly discovered sirenian...

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