Abstract

Due to their cartilaginous endoskeleton and the continuous tooth replacement, the chondrichthyan fossil record predominantly consists of isolated teeth, which offer diagnostic features for taxonomic identifications, but only provide very limited information of an organism's life history. In contrast, the calcified vertebral centra of elasmobranchs (sharks, skates and rays) yield important information about ecological and biological traits that can be utilized for constructing age-structured population dynamic models of extant species and palaeoecological reconstructions of such aspects in extinct groups. Here, we describe two large shark vertebrae from the Santonian (Upper Cretaceous) of Spain, which show a unique combination of characters (asterospondylic calcification pattern, with concentric lamellae and numerous parallel bands that are oriented perpendicular) that is only known from ptychodontid sharks, a distinct, extinct group of giant durophagous sharks of the Cretaceous era. Based on linear regression models for large extant sharks a total length between 430 and 707cm was estimated for the examined specimen. Our results indicate that ptychodontid sharks were large viviparous animals, with slow growth rates, matured very late and, therefore, show typical traits for K-selected species. These traits combined with a highly specialized feeding ecology might have played a crucial role for the success but also, eventually, extinction of this group.

Highlights

  • More than 400 million years of evolution have shaped a diverse set of biological traits in modern elasmobranchs that allowed them to occupy a variety of different niches and trophic levels

  • Previous studies showed a linear relationship between total length (TL) and vertebral centrum diameter (CD) in several shark species [30,31,32,33,34] that can be expressed with a regression equation [10,35]

  • (2) We used published regression equations for large extant shark species with comparably sized vertebrae to estimate the relationship between centrum diameter (CD; mm) and total length (TL; cm)

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Summary

Introduction

More than 400 million years of evolution have shaped a diverse set of biological traits in modern elasmobranchs (sharks, skates and rays) that allowed them to occupy a variety of different niches and trophic levels. The vertebrae yield important information about the ontogeny, growth and body size and, provide insights into the life history of this enigmatic shark group.

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