Makaira belgica (Ĺeriche, 1926)

Gracia, Carlos De, Correa-Metrio, Alex, Carvalho, Monica, Velez-Juarbe, Jorge, P ̆ rik, Tom ́ a ̆ s, , Carlos Jarami & Kri, nd Jurgen, 2022, Towards a unifying systematic scheme of fossil and living billfishes (Teleostei, Istiophoridae), Journal of Systematic Palaeontology (2091959) 20 (1), pp. 1-36 : 17-18

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.1080/14772019.2022.2091959

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub::pub:D3D3B15B-36FA-42EB-98AD-FAF369D

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CA87C4-6F3B-821D-FC50-FA90FE762009

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Makaira belgica (Ĺeriche, 1926)
status

 

Makaira belgica (Ĺeriche, 1926)

( Figs 7F, 9H, I)

1926 † Brachyrhynchus belgicus Ĺeriche: 443, figs 210, 211.

1978 † Istiophorus belgicus (Ĺeriche) in Fierstine: 8.

1990 † Makaira belgicus (Ĺeriche) in Fierstine: 15, table 2.

Diagnosis. This species is characterized by dorsally positioned internal canals in the rostrum, which represents an autapomorphic trait for this species.

Holotype. IRSNB P1117, holotype is a 200 mm-long distal rostral fragment (Ĺeriche 1926). Middle Miocene , Anvers, Belgium (Ĺeriche 1926; Schultz 1987).

New referred material. MAUL 917/1, is a 500 mm-long, nearly complete rostrum with associated left lower jaw and poorly preserved and deformed skull from the late Miocene of Pietra Leccese Formation, Apulia, Italy ( Carnevale et al. 2002).

Occurrence. Middle Miocene (Burdigalian) to late Miocene (Tortonian).

Remarks. † Makaira belgica represents the earliest record of the genus Makaira . The holotype is represented by a 200 mm distal rostral fragment ( Fig. 8B), which is robust and oval in cross-section ( Fig. 9H, I). At 0.25 L, it has a pair of small and circular internal canals, which are arranged dorsally and parallel along the midline ( Fig. 9H). In the new specimen MAUL 917/ 1 referred to this species, the prenasals and maxillae are well preserved but the nasals are only partially preserved. In the holotype the nasals are only represented by grooves ( Fig. 8B) (Ĺeriche 1926; Schultz 1987). Alveoli and denticles are visible across the completely ventral surface in both specimens ( Fig. 8B) ( Carnevale et al. 2002).

The studied ratios of † M. belgica at the 0.5 L section fall within the rage of recent and fossil M. nigricans , but differ in its dorsally aligned internal canals ( Figs 9H, I, 10) (Ĺeriche 1926; Schultz 1987). This feature represents the only autapomorphy for this species ( Fig. 9H–I). The holotype ( IRSNB P1117) of † M. belgica is represented by a poorly preserved distal rostral fragment and we assign a second specimen, MAUL 917/1, to this taxon, because both specimens have dorsally arranged internal canals ( Fig. 9H, I), representing an autapomorphic trait for this species. Specimen MAUL 917/1 has internal canals in a dorsal position at 0.25 L ( Fig. 9H, I; see also Carnevale et al. 2002), which is consistent with what is seen in the holotype of † M. belgica ( Fig. 9N). Specimen MAUL 917/1 additionally has distinctive ratios for D2/ VSPM and W2/ VSPM. These out-of-range values are interpreted as short VSPM that covers less than 50% of the rostrum length.

IRSNB

Institut Royal des Sciences Naturelles de Belgique

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

SubClass

Neopterygii

InfraClass

Teleostei

Order

Perciformes

Family

Istiophoridae

Genus

Makaira

Loc

Makaira belgica (Ĺeriche, 1926)

Gracia, Carlos De, Correa-Metrio, Alex, Carvalho, Monica, Velez-Juarbe, Jorge, P ̆ rik, Tom ́ a ̆ s, , Carlos Jarami & Kri, nd Jurgen 2022
2022
Loc

Brachyrhynchus belgicus

Leriche 1926
1926
Loc

Makaira belgicus

Leriche 1926
1926
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