dc.contributor.author |
Bratishko, A. |
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dc.contributor.author |
Schwarzhans, W. |
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dc.contributor.author |
Vernyhorova, Y. |
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dc.date.accessioned |
2023-03-23T12:48:18Z |
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dc.date.available |
2023-03-23T12:48:18Z |
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dc.date.issued |
2023 |
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dc.identifier.other |
DOI: https://doi.org/10.54103/2039-4942/18877 |
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dc.identifier.uri |
http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/9546 |
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dc.description |
Bratishko A. The endemic marine fish fauna from the Eastern Paratethys reconstructed from otoliths from the Miocene (middle Sarmatian s.l.; Bessarabian) of Jurkine (Kerch Peninsula, Crimea) / A. Bratishko, W. Schwarzhans, Y. Vernyhorova // Riv. It. Paleontol. Strat., 129(1): P. 111-184. |
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dc.description.abstract |
: Reconstructing fossil bony fish faunas using otoliths is a well-established method that allows a diverse and dense record in time and space to be assembled. Here, we report about a rich otolith-based fish fauna from
the middle Sarmatian s.l. (middle Bessarabian) from Jurkine, Kerch Peninsula, Crimea. The study is based on more
than 5,000 specimens constituting 36 different species, 24 of which are new and two remain in open nomenclature.
This assemblage represents the first major otolith association described from the Bessarabian. It also represents a fish
fauna from the last continuous restricted marine environment that evolved in the Eastern Paratethys, was recruited
from the Badenian/Tarkhanian fauna, and was not affected by the subsequent Khersonian crisis. The association
of otoliths is characterized by a high content of endemic fishes that derived from the relatively well-known early
Sarmatian s.l. (Volhynian) fish fauna, and it contains certain faunal elements that were trapped in the then-isolated
Eastern Paratethys and did not range into younger strata. This forced endemic evolution explains the unusually high
percentage of new taxa.
The fish fauna is dominated by stenohaline marine shelf fishes apparently recruited from the Konkian and
earlier Sarmatian s.l. (Volhynian) fauna after the Karaganian crisis. The families Gobiidae and Gadidae benefited most
in this restricted marine environment, while deep-water fishes disappeared with the Karaganian crisis. In this study, we
discuss the further evolution of Eastern Paratethyan fishes as far as can be reconstructed from the relatively limited
data from post-Bessarabian strata and also outline targets for future research in the field.
The stratigraphic sequence of the Jurkine section is being revised based on a detailed suite of benthic foraminifera. Implications for the stratigraphy of the middle and upper Sarmatian s.l., their boundary, and the paleoenvironments of this part of the Kerch Peninsula are discussed. |
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dc.language.iso |
en |
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dc.subject |
Crimea |
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dc.subject |
Bessarabian |
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dc.subject |
otoliths |
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dc.subject |
foraminifera |
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dc.subject |
Eastern Paratethys |
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dc.subject |
endemic evolution |
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dc.subject |
Gobiidae |
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dc.subject |
Gadidae |
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dc.title |
The endemic marine fish fauna from the Eastern Paratethys reconstructed from otoliths from the Miocene (middle Sarmatian s.l.; Bessarabian) of Jurkine (Kerch Peninsula, Crimea) |
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dc.type |
Article |
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