Cetotherium ("whale beast") adalah genus dari Cetacea dalam famili Cetotheriidae.
Taksonomi
The family Cetotheriidae and the genus
Cetotherium (sensu lato) have been used as wastebaskets for all kinds of baleen whales, most notably by Brandt 1873, Spassky (1954) and Mčedlidze 1970. Based on more recent phylogenetic studies and revisions of many 19th century genera, much smaller monophyletic Cetotheriidae and
Cetotherium sensu stricto is limited to a single or only a few species. For example, Gol'din, Startsev & Krakhmalnaya 2013 included only C. rathkii and C. riabinini in the genus and only ten genera in the family.
Cetotheriidae were thought to have gone extinct during the Pliocene until 2012, when it was hypothesized that the Pygmy right whale was the sole surviving species of this family.
= Sebelumnya dikelompokkan dalam Cetotherium
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The following species were originally described as nominal species of
Cetotherium but have been either reassigned to other genera or removed from
Cetotherium:
Cetotherium furlongi Kellogg, 1925, is known from a partial skull from the Burdigalian of the Vaqueros Formation in California, but the holotype is lost.
Cetotherium gastaldii Strobel, 1875, known from the early Pliocene-age Sabbie d'Asti Formation of the Piedmont region in Italy, is now the type species of the eschrichtiid genus Eschrichtioides.
Cetotherium klinderi Brandt, 1871, is known from an isolated earbone from Miocene sediments in Chişinău, Moldova. Although fragmentary, it does not appear to be congeneric with either of the two valid species of
Cetotherium.
Cetotherium maicopicum Spasski, 1951, based on a specimen from the late Miocene of the Russian Caucasus, has been reassigned to the genus Kurdalagonus from the same region.
Cetotherium mayeri Brandt, 1871, known from a partial skeleton, is apparently not congeneric with
Cetotherium.
Evolusi
Cetotheres came into existence during the Oligocene epoch. The cetotheres have been divided into two sub-groups. One group includes
Cetotherium. From evolutionary perspective, these whales share some characteristics of the Balaenopteridae and Eschrichtiidae.
Paleobiologi
Fossil record have revealed predator-prey relationship between large sharks (e.g. C. megalodon) and Cetotheriids. The raptorial toothed whale, Livyatan melvillei, may too have posed a threat to these whales.
Referensi
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