Search results for "Carcharhinus"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Dental microwear texture analysis on extant and extinct sharks : Ante- or post-mortem tooth wear?

2020

Sharks are apex-predators that play an important role in past and present aquatic food webs. However, their diet - especially in extinct species - is often not well constrained. Dental microwear texture analysis (DMTA) has been successfully applied to reconstruct diet and feeding behaviours of different aquatic and terrestrial vertebrates. However, unlike in mammals, food-to-tooth contact in sharks is rather limited because only larger prey is manipulated before swallowing. Together with a fast tooth replacement rate, this reduces wear on individual teeth. Here, we present an explorative study of dental microwear texture on extant and extinct sharks to test whether ante-mortem wear is relat…

010506 paleontologyDental WearZoologyExtinct specieschemical and pharmacologic phenomenaShark teeth010502 geochemistry & geophysicsOceanography01 natural sciencesTexture (geology)DMTAZoologiPredationExtant taxonstomatognathic system14. Life underwaterEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesbiologyTumbling experimentPaleontologyGeologybiology.organism_classificationstomatognathic diseasesHabitatTooth wearCarcharhinusGeologiAlterationhuman activitiesZoologyGeologyElasmobranchii
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First historical records of Carcharhinus brachyurus (Chondrichthyes, Carcharhiniformes) in the Mediterranean Sea

2009

The dried jaws of two specimens of Carcharhinus brachyurus were found in the collections of the Zoological Museum of the University of Palermo. Both pieces belong to the great Doderlein collection of fishes from Sicily assembled during the end of the nineteenth century (1862-1892) and are labelled as Carcarias (Prionodon) lamia and Carcharias lamia, respectively. These findings represent the first historical evidence of the presence of C. brachyurus in the Mediterranean Sea and add the southern Tyrrhenian to the species distribution within the Mediterranean. Moreover, sexual dimorphism in tooth morphology is documented for the first time in Mediterranean specimens. Some meristic and morphol…

Mediterranean climatebiologyEcologyCarcharhinus brachyurus historical record Mediterranean SeaPrionodonSettore BIO/05 - Zoologiabiology.organism_classificationChondrichthyesCarchariasMediterranean seaCarcharhinusCarcharhiniformesAnimal Science and ZoologyMeristics
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Os carcharhiniformes (cCondrichthyes, Neoselachii) da Bacia de Alvalade (Portugal)

2021

The uppermost Miocene, Esbarrondadoiro Formation (Alvalade basin, Portugal) yielded more than 10 thousandSelachian teeth at Santa Margarida, Esbarrondadoiro and Vale de Zebro outcrops. Forty-five taxa were identifiedbelonging to the orders Hexanchiformes, Squaliformes, Lamniformes, Carcharhiniformes, Torpediniformes and Myliobatiformes. The Carcharhiniformes make up about 40% of the selachian fauna that has been identified in the studiedarea. The different distribution of the Carcharhiniformes (as well as that of the other orders) by the three sitespoints out to distinct environments in the corresponding areas: Esbarrondadoiro indicates relatively deeper, ratherstill waters; Santa Margarida…

Myliobatiformesselachians carcharhiniformes alvalade basin portugal uppermost miocene.biologyFaunaPaleontologyHexanchiformesPelagic zonebiology.organism_classificationQE701-760SqualiformesOceanographyCarcharhinusCarcharhiniformesLamniformesGeologySpanish Journal of Palaeontology
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The determination of maturity stages in male elasmobranchs (Chondrichthyes) using a segmented regression of clasper length on total length

2013

A novel statistical method for estimating the stages of maturity in male sharks and skates based on a segmented regression (SRM) is proposed. We hypothesize that this method is able to find the transition points in the three-phase relationship between total length (TL) and clasper length (CL). We applied an SRM to TL–CL data of nine species, from large pelagic sharks (e.g., Carcharhinus falciformis) to small coastal skates (e.g., Rioraja agassizi), captured in the southwestern Atlantic and northeastern Pacific. As expected, SRM detected two breakpoints, defining three maturity stages (immature, maturing, and mature), in six out of nine species. For three species, it was not possible to fin…

breakpointMaturity (geology)biologyEcologySampling (statistics)ZoologyPelagic zoneAquatic ScienceClaspersharksbiology.organism_classificationChondrichthyesSegmented regressionCarcharhinusRioraja agassiziSegmented regressionmaturitySettore SECS-S/01 - StatisticaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCanadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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