Hoplocetus Explained
Hoplocetus is an extinct genus of raptorial cetacean of the sperm whale superfamily, Physeteroidea.[1] Its remains have been found in the Miocene of Belgium, France, Germany and Malta, the Pliocene of Belgium and France, and the Pleistocene of the United Kingdom and South Carolina.[2]
Dentition
The teeth of Hoplocetus are massive (95–150 mm in length; 27–47 in maximum diameter), robust and have a short enamel cap on the crowns. They are somewhat larger than those of modern orcas[3] but considerably smaller than those of macroraptorial sperm whales, such as Zygophyseter, as well as those of Scaldicetus caretti.[4] They display a large degree of abrasion, suggesting a highly predatory niche comparable to that of modern orcas. The genus of the latter, Orcinus, first appears in the middle Pliocene and it may have eventually replaced Hoplocetus.
These teeth features also characterize the other extinct toothed whale genera, Diaphorocetus, Idiorophus and Scaldicetus, sometimes placed with Hoplocetus in the subfamily Hoplocetinae.[5] However, some of these taxa are fragmentary and have been used as wastebasket taxa for non-diagnostic material of stem physeteroids.
Notes and References
- Hampe. O.. Middle/late Miocene hoplocetine sperm whale remains (Odontoceti: Physeteridae) of North Germany with an emended classification of the Hoplocetinae. Fossil Record. 9. 1. 2006. 61–86. 10.1002/mmng.200600002. free.
- Web site: Hoplocetus in the Paleobiology Database . . 17 December 2021 . 12 December 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211212182844/http://www.fossilworks.org/cgi-bin/bridge.pl?a=taxonInfo&taxon_no=36728 . dead .
- Web site: Orcas: Facts About Killer Whales. Bradford. A.. 2014-11-20. Live Science. 2018-11-12.
- J. W. F.. Reumer. T. H.. Mens. K.. Post. 2017. New Finds of Giant Raptorial Sperm Whale Teeth (Cetacea, Physeteroidea) from the Westerschelde Estuary (Province of Zeeland, the Netherlands). Deinsea. 17. 32–38. 2018-11-12.
- Nuevos Restos de Scaldicetus (Cetacea, Odontoceti, Physeteridae) del Mioceno Superior, Sector Occidental de la Cuenca del Guadalquivir (Sur de España). A.. Toscano. M.. Abad . F.. Ruiz. F.. Muñiz. G.. Álvarez. E.. García. J. A.. Caro. 2013. New Remains of Scaldicetus (Cetacea, Odontoceti, Physeteridae) from the Upper Miocene, Western Sector of the Guadalquivir Basin. Revista Mexicana de Ciencias Geológicas. 30. 2. Spanish.