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Palaeontos 20
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Reinecke T., Louwye
S., Havekost U. & Moths H., 2011, The elasmobranch fauna of the late
Burdigalian, Miocene, at Werder-Uesen, Lower Saxony, Germany, and its
relationships with Early Miocene faunas in the North Atlantic, Central
Paratethys and Mediterranean – ISSN 1377-4654.
170 pages, 40
text-figures, 3 tables, 101 plates
Abstract:
The Lower Mica Fine Sand
(LMFS) Formation at Werder-Uesen, northwestern Lower Saxony, Germany,
yields 40 shark and 12 batoid species, 13 of which are reported in open
nomenclature. The recovered elasmobranch remains are mainly isolated
teeth, and less commonly gill rakers, caudal spines, thorns, dermal
denticles and vertebrae. The fauna is the richest thus far reported from
shelf regions of the southern North Sea Basin and also one of the most
diverse elasmobranch faunas collected from the Early and Middle Miocene of
Europe. The sediments of the LMFS Formation sampled at Werder-Uesen
represent the upper levels of the early Hemmoor regional stage („Behrendorf
substage“) which corresponds to the middle and late Burdigalian. The
dinoflagellate cyst assemblage recovered at Werder-Uesen correlates with
the Cousteaudinium aubryae Biozone of Dybkja er & Piasecki
(2010) which has a late Burdigalian age. Most shark and ray genera of the
Werder-Uesen fauna, e.g. Carcharias, Chaenogaleus, Carcharhinus,
Galeocerdo, Hemipristis, Paragaleus, Rhizoprionodon, Sphyrna, Aetobatus,
Dasyatis, Rhinobatos, Rhynchobatus, Rostroraja and Taeniura,
are closely related with present-day neritic and benthic taxa dwelling
in warm-temperate and subtropical shelf seas. In addition, a small but
significant elasmobranch assemblage indicative of pelagic, oceanic
habitats (9 species of Isurus, Alopias, Megachasma, Prionace,
Megascyliorhinus, Plinthicus) is present, whereas taxa living in
present-day deepwaters of the oceans and continental slopes (Hexanchus,
Echinorhinus, Iago) are very rarely encountered. 25 shark and 8 batoid
taxa of the Werder-Uesen fauna entered the Miocene North Sea Basin for the
first time. The prominent increase in species richness, which is known
also for other groups of vertebrates and invertebrates in the early
Hemmoor regional stage, likely results from the middle to late Burdigalian
warming that passed into the Mid-Miocene climate optimum. The common
presence of some species of Isurus and Alopias in the LMFS
Formation, compared with their uncommonness or absence in
Aquitanian to early
Burdigalian sediments of the same region, supports the hypothesis, that a
permanent marine connection became established in middle Burdigalian times
between the southern North Sea and the warm-temperate eastern Atlantic.
Interregional comparison shows a marked correspondence of shelf-related
neritic and benthic taxa in boreal (North Sea), Mediterranean and central
Paratethyan realms during the middle/late Burdigalian. This likely
resulted from the shift and enlargement of warm-temperate/subtropical
climate areas to northern latitudes which established similar thermophilic
faunal assemblages by dispersion into the North Sea Basin via the eastern
Atlantic. However, the lack of the present-day tropical/subtropical genera
Ginglymostoma, Isogomphodon, Negaprion, Pseudocarcharias,
Pteromylaeus, Rhinoptera and Pristis in the North Sea Basin and
their partial presence in the Mediterranean Tethys and Central Paratethys
indicates a faunal differentiation in the European Burdigalian which was
probably governed by climatic factors.
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