Acrophyseter is a genus of extinct sperm whale that lived in the Late Miocene off the coast of what is now Peru. The genus comprises two species: A. deinodon and A. robustus. It is part of a group of macroraptorial sperm whales that all share several features for hunting large prey, such as deeply rooted and thick teeth. Acrophyseter measured in length, making it the smallest macroraptorial sperm whale currently known. Because of its short pointed snout and strongly curved front teeth, it probably fed on the marine vertebrates of its time, such as seals and other whales.
In 2017, another species, A. robustus, was described by the same authors from a skull, catalogued as MUSM 1399, discovered in the Cerro la Bruja locality. This locality is older than Sud-Sacaco, dating between the Serravallian and Tortonian stages of the Miocene, at the least older than 9.2 million years. Later, a second A. deinodon specimen consisting of a right parietal bone was recovered from the Aguada de Lomas locality and recorded as MNHM F-PPI 272. The rocks at Aguada de Lomas are younger than both previously mentioned localities, and the specimen was dated to the Messinian stage of the Miocene, 6.9–6.7 mya. There have been doubts about its referral to A. deinodon, with some suggesting that it actually represents A. robustus instead.
A third Acrophyseter skull, catalogued MUSM 2182, was discovered in the Cerro los Quesos locality, dating from the same period as Aguada de Lomas. Its specific attribution has not been formally established, although it shares some similarities with the holotype skull of A. robustus.
The genus name Acrophyseter is derived from the Ancient Greek —meaning acute, which describes the short, pointed, upturned snout—and —which is the genus name for the modern sperm whale Physeter macrocephalus. The species name deinodon is from the Greek —meaning terrible—and —tooth. The species name robustus comes from Latin and references the thick bone constituting the edges of the supracranial basin and the base of the rostrum.
Unlike modern sperm whales, A. deinodon had teeth in both its upper and lower jaws. The teeth were robust and deeply set into the dental alveoli, particularly the front teeth, the tooth roots were comparatively thick when compared to the thin tooth crown. The front teeth were more conical than those further back in the mouth. The lower back teeth were tightly packed, and the space between the teeth increased from front to back, suggesting they were used in a shearing motion. This suggests a different feeding strategy from modern sperm whales, which all use suction-feeding due to a lack of teeth in the upper jaw. The front teeth were more worn on the sides, whereas the lower teeth were more worn along the middle.
A. deinodon had 12 teeth in the upper jaw and 13 teeth in the lower jaw and possessed tooth enamel like other macroraptorial sperm whales. The bore three teeth, and the had nine teeth. Unlike in other sperm whales, the top of the premaxillae near the vomer lacked a deep groove. The last lower teeth may have contacted the roof of the mouth, and cementum was continually added to the teeth as they were growing, as in ( Orcinus orca). The tooth count of A. robustus is unknown, though it is thought to be similar to or the same as that of A. deinodon. Discovered along the dental alveolus were buccal exostoses: bony growths which may have developed during biting to strengthen the teeth, acting as buttresses. The back teeth had larger buccal exostoses as they experienced more pressure during biting.
Like other sperm whales, Acrophyseter had a deep basin on the top of its skull, the supracranial basin. This is overhung by the nuchal lines on the back of the skull. The supracranial basin, in turn, overhangs the orbit around the eye but does not extend onto the snout, unlike in other macroraptorial sperm whales. The on the sides of the skull were as high as they were long, unlike in Zygophyseter and Brygmophyseter. This displaces the brow ridge, which slopes down at an angle of around 55 degrees. Acrophyseter
Description
Taxonomy
Paleobiology
Paleoecology
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