Earliest Records of Holocene Cetaceans in the Black Sea

Author:

Aiken Magie1ORCID,Gladilina Elena2,Çakirlar Canan3,Telizhenko Serhii4,Bejenaru Luminita5,Bukhsianidze Maia6,Olsen Morten Tange1,Gol'din Pavel7

Affiliation:

1. Section for Molecular Ecology and Evolution, Globe Institute University of Copenhagen Denmark

2. Ukrainian Scientific Center of Ecology of the Sea, Odesa, Ukraine BioEcoLinks Lymanka Ukraine

3. Groningen Institute of Archaeology University of Groningen The Netherlands

4. Institute of Archaeology National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Kyiv Ukraine

5. Faculty of Biology Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iași Romania

6. Georgian National Museum Tbilisi Georgia

7. Schmalhausen Institute of Zoology National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Kyiv Ukraine

Abstract

ABSTRACTThe timing of the Holocene transition of the Black Sea from a brackish lake to a marine sea has long been debated. Here, we report on the earliest records of cetaceans in the Black Sea region as a proxy for the connection with the Mediterranean and the transition from a brackish to marine environment. We base our analysis on cetacean skeletal finds and archival data on cetacean skeletal remains from the Bosphorus, the western, northern and eastern Black Sea, and the Kerch Strait. We find that all three contemporary cetacean species in the Black Sea – the harbour porpoise, bottlenose dolphin and common dolphin – had migrated out of the Mediterranean to the Bosphorus and the Black Sea at least 8000–7000 years ago and reached the northern Black Sea by 5500 years ago at the latest. Our study suggests the establishment of a Mediterranean–Black Sea biogeographical connection for marine vertebrates at least 7000 years ago. The early presence of cetaceans in the Black Sea has implications for understanding its Holocene transition, as well as the evolutionary and ecological history of these species more generally.

Funder

Carlsbergfondet

Publisher

Wiley

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