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   » » Wiki: Otodus
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Otodus is an , cosmopolitan genus of which lived from the to the epochs.


Description
All species are known from their , and four of them ( O. obliquus, O. auriculatus, O. angustidens and ) are also known from their fossilized . Like other , the of spp. were composed of , resulting in relatively few preserved skeletal structures appearing within the fossil record. The teeth of this shark are large with triangular crown, smooth cutting edges, and visible cusps on the roots.


Size estimation
The of sharks indicate that they were very large macro-predatory sharks. The largest known teeth of O. obliquus measure about in height. The vertebral centrum of this species are over 12.7 cm (5 inch) wide. Scientists suggest that O. obliquus would have measured about long. Other species were much larger, with O. auriculatus, O. angustidens and O. chubutensis being estimated to have reached maximum body lengths of , and , respectively. Studies have estimating the maximum body length of have varied, stating measurements ranging from approximately to 24.3 m (80ft) .


Growth and reproduction
Comparative studies of the centrum radii and growth rings on the vertebrae of O. obliquus and the extant great white shark through X-rays have concluded that the sizes of the vertebrae at birth are similar, meaning that the offspring of both species would have the same size (between in length); they also revealed that they grew at the same rate until reaching 10 years of age, during which O. obliquus would have become sexually mature and attained a growth rate faster than that of the extant great white shark. A sexually mature individual of O. obliquus would have measured about long. Like the extant great white shark, it is likely that males could have reached sexual maturity earlier than females.

O. angustidens also had a faster growth rate than the extant great white shark, while O. auriculatus and the extant great white shark had a similar growth rate. O. megalodon had a much faster growth rate (nearly two times that of the extant great white), but likely had an extremely delayed sexual maturity based on the result of the study that the slowing or cessation of somatic growth in megalodon occurred around 25 years of age.

Like contemporaneous sharks, at least two species of Otodus ( O. angustidens and O. megalodon) made use of nursery areas to birth their young in, specifically warm-water coastal environments with large amounts of food and protection from predators. A possible nursery area of O. obliquus has been discovered in the Ganntour basin, Morocco.


Distribution
Otodus had a worldwide distribution, as fossils have been excavated from , , , , , and .


Diet
Otodus was likely the of its time and commonly preyed upon , , (e.g. ), and .

There is also potential evidence that Otodus hunted raptorial sperm whales; a tooth belonging to an undetermined long physeteroid closely resembling those of discovered in the Nutrien Aurora Phosphate Mine in North Carolina suggests that a or O. chubutensis may have aimed for the head of the sperm whale in order to inflict a fatal bite, the resulting attack leaving distinctive bite marks on the tooth. While scavenging behavior cannot be ruled out as a possibility, the placement of the bite marks is more consistent with predatory attacks than feeding by scavenging, as the jaw is not a particularly nutritious area for a shark to feed or focus on. The fact that the bite marks were found on the tooth's roots further suggest that the shark broke the whale's jaw during the bite, suggesting the bite was extremely powerful. The fossil is also notable as it stands as the first known instance of an antagonistic interaction between a sperm whale and an otodontid shark recorded in the fossil record.

Schwenk et al. (2026) compared enrichment of the enameloid of Otodus obliquus and O. megalodon, finding evidence of higher concentrations of zinc in regions of teeth of O. megalodon which were affected by high stress during feeding and finding evidence of less pronounced spatial variation of zinc in O. obliquus, and interpret this finding as suggestive of a shift from a -based diet to a more -based diet during the evolutionary history of otodontid sharks.


Evolution
It is widely believed that the genus originates from a lineage of sharks belonging to the genus , due to strong similarities in tooth morphology. Scientists determined that Otodus evolved into the genus Carcharocles, given substantial fossil evidence in the form of transitional teeth. Some teeth have been excavated from the sediments of the Nanjemoy Formation in Maryland, USA, Ypres clay in Belgium, and western , which are morphologically very similar to Otodus teeth but with lightly serrated cusplets and a serrated cutting edge. These transitional fossils suggest a worldwide evolutionary event, and support the theory that Otodus eventually evolved into Otodus aksuaticus and thus initiated the Carcharocles lineage. A more recent study of Megalolamna's taxonomic relationships demonstrates the possibility that Otodus needs to include the species sometimes assigned to Carcharocles (i.e., the megatoothed lineage, including ) in order to be .


Undescribed species
Otodus includes species that have not yet been formally described. One of these is Otodus debrayi, which is known to have lived from the Early to Middle Eocene epoch.

This species has been found in , , , and , dating from 47.8 to 38 million years ago. Also undescribed is Otodus poseidoni, which measured 12 meters in length. Its teeth measure up to in length. Some scientists consider these possible species to be a variation of , Otodus aksuaticus or Otodus auriculatus, but this is not confirmed.


See also

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