Artigo Acesso aberto Produção Nacional Revisado por pares

Repeated mass strandings of Miocene marine mammals from Atacama Region of Chile point to sudden death at sea

2014; Royal Society; Volume: 281; Issue: 1781 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1098/rspb.2013.3316

ISSN

1471-2954

Autores

Nicholas D. Pyenson, Carolina S. Gutstein, James F. Parham, J.P. Le Roux, Catalina Carreño Chavarría, Holly Little, Adam Metallo, Vincent Rossi, Ana M. Valenzuela‐Toro, Jorge Vélez‐Juarbe, Cara Santelli, David Rubilar Rogers, Mário Alberto Cozzuol, Mario E. Suárez,

Tópico(s)

Isotope Analysis in Ecology

Resumo

Marine mammal mass strandings have occurred for millions of years, but their origins defy singular explanations. Beyond human causes, mass strandings have been attributed to herding behaviour, large-scale oceanographic fronts and harmful algal blooms (HABs). Because algal toxins cause organ failure in marine mammals, HABs are the most common mass stranding agent with broad geographical and widespread taxonomic impact. Toxin-mediated mortalities in marine food webs have the potential to occur over geological timescales, but direct evidence for their antiquity has been lacking. Here, we describe an unusually dense accumulation of fossil marine vertebrates from Cerro Ballena, a Late Miocene locality in Atacama Region of Chile, preserving over 40 skeletons of rorqual whales, sperm whales, seals, aquatic sloths, walrus-whales and predatory bony fish. Marine mammal skeletons are distributed in four discrete horizons at the site, representing a recurring accumulation mechanism. Taphonomic analysis points to strong spatial focusing with a rapid death mechanism at sea, before being buried on a barrier-protected supratidal flat. In modern settings, HABs are the only known natural cause for such repeated, multispecies accumulations. This proposed agent suggests that upwelling zones elsewhere in the world should preserve fossil marine vertebrate accumulations in similar modes and densities.

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