Abstract
Elasmobranch remains are quite common in Miocene deposits and were the subject of numerous studies since the middle of the nineteenth century. Nevertheless, the taxonomic diversity of the Marine Molasse sharks, rays and skates is still largely unknown. Here, we describe 37 taxa from the lower Miocene of the Molasse Basin: 21 taxa could be identified at species level, whereas 15 taxa could only be assigned to genus and one taxon is left as order incertae sedis. The material was collected from deposits of the Auwiesholz Member of the Achen Formation (middle Burdigalian, middle Ottnangian age, ca. 17.8 Ma) exposed near Simssee, Upper Bavaria. This faunal assemblage is a mixture of shallow marine, near-coastal, pelagic and deep-water taxa. The fauna from Simssee displays different biogeographic dynamics at local and regional scales, possibly related to the intense climatic, oceanographic and tectonic events that occurred during the Eggenburgian–Ottnangian stages. The faunal relationships of the early Miocene chondrichthyan faunas from the Mediterranean Sea and Paratethys with others regions are established on the basis of qualitative (presence/absence) data. The beta diversity (Sørensen–Dice coefficient) of the Miocene Molasse elasmobranchs was used to characterize the taxonomic differentiation between localities and regions. According to our results, the fauna from Simssee shows close similarities with those from Switzerland, Austria, France and northern Germany. Faunal similarities and differences are mainly related to tectonic events and oceanographic variables (i.e. migration through seaway passages) or might represent collecting biases.
Highlights
After the Tethys Ocean had nearly completely vanished by the end of the Eocene, an isolated Paratethys Sea developed in the latest Eocene–earliest Oligocene related to the development of the Alpine mountains (Baldi 1980; Rusu 1988; Rögl 1999)
Elasmobranch remains are quite common in the Marine Molasse Basin of southern Germany and highlight a diversified cartilaginous fish fauna (Barthelt et al 1991; Pollerspöck and Straube 2017; this study)
Rays and skates are well represented in the fossiliferous deposits of the Achen Formation in the Simssee area
Summary
After the Tethys Ocean had nearly completely vanished by the end of the Eocene, an isolated Paratethys Sea developed in the latest Eocene–earliest Oligocene related to the development of the Alpine mountains (Baldi 1980; Rusu 1988; Rögl 1999). This island chain acted as barrier partly separating the Paratethys from the Mediterranean Sea. The Paratethys extended from the Rhone Valley in the east towards Inner Asia. We document an elasmobranch assemblage from the lower Miocene Upper Marine Molasse of the western Paratethys and present results about their relationships with other faunas from the early Miocene. We estimated the true (i.e. discoverable) taxonomic richness based on the Chao
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