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Higgs, Nicholas D.; Little, Crispin T. S.; Glover, Adrian G.; Dahlgren, Thomas G.; Smith, Craig R.; Dominici, Stefano. (2012). Evidence of Osedax worm borings in Pliocene (∼3 Ma) whale bone from the Mediterranean. Historical Biology. 24(3): 269-277.
484403
10.1080/08912963.2011.621167 [view]
Higgs, Nicholas D.; Little, Crispin T. S.; Glover, Adrian G.; Dahlgren, Thomas G.; Smith, Craig R.; Dominici, Stefano
2012
Evidence of <i>Osedax</i> worm borings in Pliocene (∼3 Ma) whale bone from the Mediterranean
Historical Biology
24(3): 269-277
Publication
Annelidabase. No ZooBank registration but the journal is online + print. Online 24 Oct 2011 but the journal dates the print article as June 2012
Osedax worms subsist entirely on vertebrate skeletons on the seafloor, using root-like tissues to bore into and degrade the bones. Paleontologists have only recently begun to appreciate the possible destructive effect that these worms may have had on the marine vertebrate fossil record and little is known of their evolutionary history. Using microcomputed tomography, we document Osedax-like borings in a fossil whale bone from the Pliocene of Italy and present new data on the borings of extant Osedax worms. The fossil borings are distinguished from those of other known borers and identified as traces of Osedax activity based on diagnostic features. Our results suggest that it is necessary to isolate individual borings for the confident identification of Osedax traces. This is only the second paleogeographic occurrence of Osedax in the fossil record and indicates that by the Pliocene these worms had colonised a large portion of the world's oceans. This is the first evidence for Osedax in the Mediterranean, past or present, and suggests that more species await discovery in this region. [Not mentioned in the abstract but in an appendix the authors create Osspecus tuscia, as an ichnotaxon name for the fossil borings presumed to be created by Osedax]
Mediterranean Sea in general
Paleontology, Fossils, Paleobiology
Systematics, Taxonomy
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Date
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2024-05-04 09:12:37Z
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2024-05-05 22:12:21Z
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 Editor's comment

Osspecus is an ichnotaxon, a trace fossil of an animal's activity, not the remnant of an actual animal. Code ... [details]

 Etymology

Osspecus is named from the combination of Latin os, bone and specus, cavern. The genus is masculine as 'specus' is ... [details]

 Etymology

Ichnotaxon Osspecus tuscia is named after the Tuscany region of Italy, the source locality of the holotype. [details]

 Grammatical gender

Masculine as 'specus' is masculine [details]

 Publication date

Online version of record 24 Oct 2011 but no ZooBank registration and the journal dates the print publication as ... [details]

 Type locality

Borings in probable Mesoplodon Ziphiidae radius bone from, Orciano Pisano area near Pisa, Tuscany. Geolocation not ... [details]

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