Fossil Sirenia from the Pleistocene of Qatar: new questions about the antiquity of sea cows in the Gulf Region

Author:

Pyenson Nicholas D.12ORCID,Al-Ansi Mehsin3,Fieseler Clare M.1ORCID,Al Jaber Khalid Hassan4,Klim Katherine D.1ORCID,LeBlanc Jacques5ORCID,Mohamed Ahmad Mujthaba Dheen3,Al-Shaikh Ismail6,Marshall Christopher D.78

Affiliation:

1. Department of Paleobiology, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, District of Columbia, United States

2. Department of Paleontology and Geology, Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture, Seattle, Washington State, United States

3. Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, Qatar University, Doha, Qatar

4. National Museum of Qatar, Qatar Museums, Doha, Qatar

5. Calgary, Alberta, Canada

6. ExxonMobil Research Qatar, Doha, Qatar

7. Department of Marine Biology, Texas A&M University-Galveston, Galveston, Texas, United States

8. Department of Ecology and Conservation Biology, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas, United States

Abstract

One of the largest and least documented populations of dugongs (Dugong dugon) resides in the coastal waters of the United Arab Emirates, and waters surrounding Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and Qatar. The archaeological record of dugongs in the Gulf Region is abundant, but little is known about their fossil record in the region. Here we report an isolated sirenian rib fragment from the Futaisi Member of the Fuwayrit Formation near the town of Al Ruwais, in northern Qatar. The Fuwayrit Formation is a marine Pleistocene deposit exposed onshore in Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. Based on the correlative dating of the basal Futaisi Member with other onshore platforms, the rib fragment is approximately 125 ka. We propose that this isolated rib (likely the first rib from the right side) belongs to Dugongidae, with strong similarities to extant Dugong. We cannot, however, eliminate the possibility that it belongs to an extinct taxon, especially given its similarities with other fossil dugongid material from both Qatar and elsewhere in the world. Aside from reflecting the presence of Gulf seagrass communities in the Pleistocene, this occurrence also suggests that different (and potentially multiple) lineages of sirenians inhabited the Gulf Region in the geologic past.

Funder

Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Natural History

Qatar National Research Fund

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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