Hemipristis serra (Agassiz, 1835)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.2008.0077 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3D85D369-7A74-44B6-9766-7C4B8B26705B |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A6C023-FF81-4E1A-1E7D-FAE5FAD9FD8B |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Hemipristis serra (Agassiz, 1835) |
status |
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Hemipristis serra (Agassiz, 1835)
Fig. 5I, J View Fig .
Referred specimens.—BCGM 9071–9073, SC 2009.18.10.
Comments.—Dignathic heterodonty is strongly developed in the dentition of Hemipristis serra , with broad, recurved, very coarsely serrated upper teeth ( Fig. 5I View Fig ) and narrower lower lateral teeth. The largest upper lateral tooth is damaged but measures 18 mm in crown height. The crown of the largest complete upper lateral tooth measures 13 mm in height and 10.5 mm in width. The cutting edges of adult lower anterior teeth are poorly developed, with a few serrations located only at the crown foot. We see no appreciable difference between the Chandler Bridge sample and teeth we have personally observed from Mio−Pliocene deposits of South Carolina, North Carolina, Maryland, and Florida.
Adnet et al. (2007) hypothesized that specimens they identified as Hemipristis cf. H. serra (Rupelian of Pakistan) represented a transitional species between H. curvatus Dames, 1883 and H. serra , indicating a direct ancestor−descendant relationship between these taxa. Interestingly, Thomas et al. (1989) tentatively identified both of these species in Rupelian strata of Oman. We recovered several small (4 mm in basal width) upper teeth that lack serrations on the mesial cutting edge ( Fig. 5J View Fig ), identical to specimens Case (1980) identified as H. wyattdurhami White, 1956 (= H. curvatus ), and we consider these to represent juvenile H. serra (see also Chandler et al. 2006). These data provide strong evidence that H. serra evolved directly from H. curvatus (see also Adnet et al. 2007). Based on histological differences with extant H. elongata (Klunzinger, 1871) , Ward and Bonavia (2001) suggested that generic reassignment of the “ H. serra ” morphology is warranted.
Stratigraphic and geographic range.—Oligocene to Pliocene, Africa, Europe, USA, Java, India, Japan.
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