Servicios Personalizados
Revista
Articulo
Indicadores
- Citado por SciELO
- Accesos
Links relacionados
- Similares en SciELO
Compartir
Revista mexicana de ciencias geológicas
versión On-line ISSN 2007-2902versión impresa ISSN 1026-8774
Rev. mex. cienc. geol vol.25 no.2 Ciudad de México ago. 2008
Reply to the comment by Stinnesbeck et al. on The oldest stratigraphic record of the Late Cretaceous shark Ptychodus mortoni Agassiz, from Vallecillo, Nuevo León, northeastern Mexico"
Réplica al comentario de Stinnesbeck et al. a "El registro estratigráfico más antiguo del tiburón del Cretácico Tardío Ptychodus mortoni Agassiz, de Vallecillo, Nuevo León, Noreste de México"
Alberto BlancoPiñón1,* and Luis M. GaribayRomero2
1 Centro de Investigaciones en Ciencias de la Tierra, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Hidalgo, Apdo. Postal 1288, Admón. 1, 42001 Pachuca, Hidalgo, México.
2 Universidad Autónoma de Guerrero. Unidad Académica de Ciencias de la Tierra, ExHacienda de San Juan Bautista, Taxco el Viejo, Guerrero, México. * albblanc@yahoo.com.
The comments by Stinnesbeck et al. (2007) to our manuscript (BlancoPiñón et al, 2007) refer to four main points:
1. Stinnebeck et al. (2007) question the validity of the FCT acronym that we used for our description of the specimen oí Ptychodus mortoni Agassiz, 1843. The acronym used for this specimen is FCT341, and we believe it is valid as far as a formal acronym for the paleontológica! collection of Facultad de Ciencias de la Tierra, Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León has not yet been assigned.
2. The first works suggesting anoxic conditions in the Vallecillo Member were published by Blanco et al. (2001), Blanco (2003), BlancoPiñón (2003), and BlancoPiñón et al. (2002, 2005). Later, Blanco et al. (2006) suggested that anoxic conditions observed in Vallecillo and in other three Mexican assemblages could be related to the Oceanic Anoxic Event 2. The last reference was not included because the work was under revision at the time we submitted BlancoPiñón et al. (2007). Concerning the works of Ifrim et al. (2005) and Ifrim (2006), we did not omit intentionally those works as suggested by Stinnesbeck et al. (this issue). Ifrim (2006) is the PhD thesis of Christina Ifrim at Karlsruhe University. By the time we submitted our manuscript (February 7, 2006), we did not have access to that thesis because it was defended on a later date (April 26, 2006). Ifrim et al. (2005) was published in the first issue of a novelty journal of restricted circulation that was not accesible to us before submitting BlancoPiñón et al. (2007) for revision.
3. Stinnesbeck et al. disagreed with the observation we cited after Cappetta (1987) that Ptychodus was a durophagous shark in the phrase "Ptychodus is a highly specialized durophagous shark that lived during the Late Cretaceous" and instead they note that "studies on the gastric contents of extant pycnodont fishes (e.g., Sparassius) demonstrated that these fishes are omnivorous and well able to prey on fishes and other food items (Ifrim et al., 2005)". We disagree on this observation because:
a) Pycnodonts (formally into the order Pycnodontiformes) are all extinct fishes.
b) We could not find references to a fish genus named Sparassius (=Sparassis), because this name correspond to a fungus and not to a fish (Dai et al., 2006).
c) Ptychodontids are sharks having a characteristic crushing dentition that allowed the shark to feed on hard bodied preys, such as mollusks. This is clearly attributed to Cappetta (1987), actually a world specialist on sharks.
d) Nowhere in BlancoPiñón et al. (2007) we wrote "pycnodonts", and the triangulation PtycodusPycnodontidsSparassius expressed by Stinnesbeck et al. is out of order. After the carefully review of Ifrim et al. (2005), we consider that this mainly arises from their report of some similarities in the body form of Nursallia and Sparus (not Sparassius). However, we did not find any analysis to support the comparison of the diet, food habits or mouth mechanisms between Sparus, pycnodonts, and sharks. Actually, the comparison between the dentition and diet of these osteichthyans (Nursallia and Sparus), and that of chondrichthyes (Ptychodus) is not easily supported nor formally published. Finally, Blanco and Frey (2001) provided a discussion about the diet of Nursallia sp., which was not cited in Ifrim et al. (2005).
4. Concerning the stratigraphic control of Ptychodus mortoni within the Vallecillo Member, we would like to reply the following:
a) Ptychodus mortoni was reported in Blanco et al. (2001). and BlancoPiñón et al. (2002) as a part of the Vallecillo Member assemblage and W. Stinnesbeck, L.G. Lopez Oliva andD. Frey were coauthors in those publications. In BlancoPiñón et al. (2007) we reported that FCT341 was collected from the uppermost part of the Vallecillo Member (and not discovered in a small museum situated at Vallecillo, as mentioned by Stinnesbeck et al), almost in contact with the darkgray, nonplaty unit of the Agua Nueva Formation. That could explain the grayish micrite matrix of the rock that contains the teeth of FCT341 (see BlancoPiñón, 1998).
b) Stinnesbeck et al. argued that we omitted to refer "the record of P. mortoni from the El Rosario quarry, Coahuila, described by Stinnesbeck et al. (2005)". However, the latter authors just provided imprecise and/or tentative identification of the fish fauna in this locality when wrote "These fishes have apparently been collected randomly at El Rosario and other quarries in the area from coeval sediments of the same depositional area. The following taxa have been tentatively identified by one of us (L. Cavin) on the basis of photographs: Ptychodus cf. P. mortoni Agassiz, 1843 (Figure 4a)" (Stinnesbeck et al. 2005, p. 407). In addition, the tooth in their fig. 4a does not show the characters of P. mortoni.
c) The assignation of FCT 341 as the oldest record of P. mortoni in the world was based on the presence of Watinoceras coloradoense. This ammonite was collected from the same level where FCT 341 was collected and was housed in the Colección Paleontológica de la FCT as unidentified specimen under the catalogue number FCT257. Later, the specimen was identified by Wolfgang Stinnesbeck as Watinoceras coloradoense, and this is the data we used in BlancoPiñón et al. (2007). Besides, such species of ammonites has been considered as a Lower Turanian ammonite (see e.g., AguileraFranco, 2003).
d) The paper by Ifrim and Stinnesbeck (2007), with information about a detailed taxonomic and biostratigraphic distribution of the ammonites of the Vallecillo Formation at Nuevo León, was published in June, 2007, and was thus not available at the time our manuscript was accepted for publication (November, 2006).
Finally, we deeply thank Stinnesbeck et al. (2007) for his comments on the article and for providing new information concerning the Vallecillo assemblage.
REFERENCES
AguileraFranco, N., 2003, CenomanianConiacian zonation (foraminifers and calcareous algae) in the GuerreroMorelos basin, southern Mexico: Revista Mexicana de Ciencias Geológicas, 20(3), 202222. [ Links ]
Blanco, A., 2003, Lithographic marls from Vallecillo, N.L. Mexico: Agua Nueva Formation or a new lithologic unit?, in Geological Society of America, Annual Meeting, Seattle, Washington, USA: Geological Society of America, Abstracts with Programs 35(6), p.87. [ Links ]
Blanco, A., Frey, E., 2001, First occurrence ofNursallia (Pycnodontoidei) in the marine sediments of the Agua Nueva Formation (Turonian), Vallecillo, NE Mexico and its significance, in III International Meeting on Mesozoic FishesSystematics, Paleonvironments and Biodiversity. SerpianoMonte San Giorgio (TICH), Switzerland, p. 10. [ Links ]
Blanco, A., Stinnesbeck, W., LópezOliva, J.G., Frey, E., Adatte, T., González, A.H., 2001, Vallecillo, Nuevo León: una nueva localidad fosilífera del Cretácico Tardío en el noreste de México: Revista Mexicana de Ciencias Geológicas, 18(2), 196199. [ Links ]
Blanco, A., DuqueBotero, F., AlvaradoOrtega, J., 2006, Lower Turonian Fossil Lagestatten in Mexico: their relationship to OAE2: Geological Society of America, Abstracts with Programs, 38(7), p. 148. [ Links ]
BlancoPiñón, A., 1998, Vallecillo Nuevo León: yacimiento fosilífero del noreste de México: Linares, N.L., Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León, Facultad de Ciencias de la Tierra, Master thesis, 148 p. [ Links ]
BlancoPiñón, A., 2003, Peces fósiles de la Formación Agua Nueva (Turoniano) en el Municipio de Vallecillo, Nuevo León, NEMéxico: Linares, N.L., Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León, Facultad de Ciencias de la Tierra, Ph.D. thesis, 345 p. [ Links ]
BlancoPiñón, A., Frey, E., Stinnesbeck, W., LópezOliva, J.G., 2002, Late Cretaceous (Turonian) fish assemblage from Vallecillo, Northeastern México: Neues Jarhrbuch für Geologie und Palaeontologie, Abhandlungen, 225(1), 3954. [ Links ]
BlancoPiñón, A., Shimada, K., GonzálezBarba, G., 2005, Lamnoid vertebrae from the Agua Nueva Formation (Upper Cretaceous: lower Turonian), northeastern Mexico: Revista Mexicana de Ciencias Geológicas, 22(1), 1923. [ Links ]
BlancoPiñón, A., GaribayRomero, L.M., AlvaradoOrtega, J., 2007, The oldest stratigraphic record of the Late Cretaceous shark Ptychodus mortoni Agassiz, from Vallecillo, Nuevo León, northeastern Mexico: Revista Mexicana de Ciencias Geológicas, 24(1), 2530. [ Links ]
Cappetta, H., 1987, Chondrichthyes II, Mesozoic and Cenozoic Elasmobranchii, in Schultze H.P. (ed.), Handbook of Paleoichthyology, v. 3B: München, Verlag Dr. Gustav Fischer, 1193. [ Links ]
Dai, Y.C., Wang, Z., Binder, M., Hibbet, D.S., 2006, Phylogeny and anew species of Sparassis (Polyporales, Basidiomicota): evidence from mitochondrial atp6, nuclear rDNA and rpb2 genes: Mycologia, 98, 584592. [ Links ]
Ifrim, C., 2006, The Fossil Lagerstatte at Vallecillo, NorthEastern Mexico: Pelagic Plattenkalks related to CenomanianTuronian Boundary Anoxia: Germany, University of Karlsruhe, PhD thesis, ix+151 p., www.ubka.unikarlsruhe.de/indexerwv/2006/baugeo/11. [ Links ]
Ifrim, C., Stinnesbeck, W., 2007, Early Turonian ammonites from Vallecillo, northeastern Mexico: taxonomy, biostratigraphy and palaeobiogiographical significance: Cretaceous Research, 28, 642664. [ Links ]
Ifrim, C., Frey, E., Stinnesbeck, W., Buchy, M.C., González González, A.H., López Oliva, J.G., 2005, Fish assemblage in Lower Turonian carbonates at Vallecillo, N.L., México: Paleos Antiguo, 1,4351. [ Links ]
Stinnesbeck, W., Ifrim, C., Schmidt, H., Rindfleisch, A., Buchy, M.C., Frey, E., González González, A.H., VegaVera, F.J., PorrasMuzquiz, H., Cavin, L., Keller, G., Smith, K.T., 2005, A new lithographic limestone deposit in the Upper Cretaceous Austin Group at El Rosario, county of Muzquiz, Coahuila, northeastern Mexico: Revista Mexicana de Ciencias Geológicas, 22(3), 401418. [ Links ]