Zoological Studies

Vol. 58, 2019

(update: 2019.12.5; 12.12)
 

Paleontological Studies of Whale Barnacles in Taiwan Reveal New Cetacean Migration Routes in the Western Pacific Since the Miocene

John Stewart Buckeridge1,3, Benny K.K. Chan2, and Jih-Pai Lin4,*

doi:10.6620/ZS.2019.58-39

1Marine & Geological Systems Group, RMIT University, Melbourne VIC 3001, Australia. E-mail: john.buckeridge@rmit.edu.au
2Biodiversity Research Center, Academia Sinica, Taipei 115, Taiwan. Email: chankk@gate.sinica.edu.tw
3Museums Victoria, Melbourne VIC 3001, Australia
4Department of Geosciences, National Taiwan University, Taipei 106, Taiwan. *Correspondence: E-mail: alexjplin@ntu.edu.tw

Received 22 May 2019 / Accepted 5 December 2019
Communicated by Yoko Nozawa

This paper reports a rediscovery of the first museum specimens of fossil whale barnacles from Taiwan. They are part of the material studied and figured by Ichiro Hayasaka in 1934. After examination of the material, which includes two cut-sections and one slice, the taxonomic assignment is revised to Coronula bifida Bronn, 1831. A petrographic study of the surrounding matrix shows that the matrix lacks slate and lithic fragments, indicating that the specimen was deposited in the pre-collision settings during the Miocene to early Pliocene. Figured specimens in Hatai’s work in 1939 were examined for comparison. The distribution record of Coronula fossils shows that whales passed through the Taiwan Strait to Okinawa and moved northwards via the Pacific coast of Honshu or entered into the Sea of Japan. The fossil record in this region extends back to the upper Miocene in Yamagata prefecture (facing the Sea of Japan) and Boso Peninsula (facing the Pacific Ocean) in Honshu (~11.2 Ma–5.3 Ma). This is one of the oldest cetacean migration routes documented to date.

Key words: Coronula, Whale barnacles, Thoracica, Miocene-Pleistocene, Taiwan.

Citation: Buckeridge JS, Chan BKK, Lin JP. 2019. Paleontological Studies of Whale Barnacles in Taiwan Reveal New Cetacean Migration Routes in the Western Pacific Since the Miocene. Zool Stud 58:39. doi:10.6620/ZS.2019.58-38.