- Source: Megachasma applegatei
Megachasma applegatei is an extinct species of megamouth shark from the Oligocene to early Miocene (28-23 Mya) of the Western United States. The type fossil was discovered in the San Joaquin Valley in 1973, but only described in 2014, when the species was named after its discoverer, Shelton Applegate.
Description
Megachasma applegatei is only known from isolated teeth. Based on comparison with the teeth of the recent species (Megachasma pelagios), it was approximately 6 m long and, like modern megamouth sharks, probably fed on fish and small planktonic invertebrates both in deep and shallow water habitats. Its teeth had shorter crowns and a pair of side cusplets. The teeth were also more variable in shape than the modern megamouth's, and may have been arranged in the distinctive heterodont "lamnoid tooth pattern" seen in predatory lamniform sharks.
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Megachasma
- Megachasma applegatei
- Megachasma
- Megachasma alisonae
- Megamouth shark
- Jewett Sand Formation
- List of the Cenozoic life of California
- List of prehistoric cartilaginous fish genera
- 2023 in paleoichthyology
- List of the Cenozoic life of Oregon
- 2014 in paleoichthyology