The evolutionary origin of the durophagous pelagic stingray ecomorph

Author:

Marramà Giuseppe1ORCID,Villalobos‐Segura Eduardo2,Zorzin Roberto3,Kriwet Jürgen2,Carnevale Giorgio1

Affiliation:

1. Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra Università degli Studi di Torino Via Valperga Caluso 35 10125 Turin Italy

2. Department of Palaeontology University of Vienna Josef‐Holaubek‐Platz 2 1090 Vienna Austria

3. Museo Civico di Storia Naturale di Verona Lungadige Porta Vittoria 9 37129 Verona Italy

Abstract

AbstractStudies of the origin of evolutionary novelties (novel traits, feeding modes, behaviours, ecological niches, etc.) have considered a number of taxa experimenting with new body plans, allowing them to occupy new habitats and exploit new trophic resources. In the marine realm, colonization of pelagic environments by marine fishes occurred recurrently through time. Stingrays (Myliobatiformes) are a diverse clade of batoid fishes commonly known to possess venomous tail stings. Current hypotheses suggest that stingrays experimented with a transition from a benthic to a pelagic/benthopelagic habitat coupled with a transition from a non‐durophagous diet to extreme durophagy. However, there is no study detailing macroevolutionary patterns to understand how and when habitat shift and feeding specialization arose along their evolutionary history. A new exquisitely preserved fossil stingray from the Eocene Konservat‐Lagerstätte of Bolca (Italy) exhibits a unique mosaic of plesiomorphic features of the rajobenthic ecomorph, and derived traits of aquilopelagic taxa, that helps to clarify the evolutionary origin of durophagy and pelagic lifestyle in stingrays. A scenario of early evolution of the aquilopelagic ecomorph is proposed based on new data, and the possible adaptive meaning of the observed evolutionary changes is discussed. The body plan of †Dasyomyliobatis thomyorkei gen. et sp. nov. is intermediate between the rajobenthic and more derived aquilopelagic stingrays, supporting its stem phylogenetic position and the hypothesis that the aquilopelagic body plan arose in association with the evolution of durophagy and pelagic lifestyle from a benthic, soft‐prey feeder ancestor.

Funder

Austrian Science Fund

Università degli Studi di Torino

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Paleontology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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