Megalodon: Megalodon (Disambiguation) Mackerel Shark Great White Shark
Megalodon: Megalodon (Disambiguation) Mackerel Shark Great White Shark
Megalodon: Megalodon (Disambiguation) Mackerel Shark Great White Shark
Megalodon
Temporal range:
PreꞒ
Pg
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Chondrichthyes
Order: Lamniformes
Family: †Otodontidae
Genus: †Otodus
Species: †O. megalodon
Binomial name
†Otodus megalodon
(Agassiz, 1843)[1]
Synonyms[2][3][4][5][6]
show
List of synonyms
Contents
1Taxonomy
o 1.1Naming
o 1.2Evolution
2Biology
o 2.1Appearance
o 2.2Size
2.2.1Maximum estimates
o 2.3Teeth and bite force
o 2.4Internal anatomy
3Paleobiology
o 3.1Range and habitat
3.1.1Locations of fossils
o 3.2Prey relationships
o 3.3Competition
o 3.4Feeding strategies
o 3.5Growth and reproduction
4Extinction
o 4.1Climate change
o 4.2Changing ecosystem
5In popular culture
6See also
7Notes
8References
9Further reading
10External links
Taxonomy
Naming
The depiction of a shark's head by Nicolas Steno in his work The Head of a Shark Dissected
While the earliest megalodon remains have been reported from the Late Oligocene,
around 28 million years ago (mya),[24][25] there is disagreement as to when it appeared,
with dates ranging to as young as 16 mya. [26] It has been thought that megalodon
became extinct around the end of the Pliocene, about 2.6 mya;[26][27] claims
of Pleistocene megalodon teeth, younger than 2.6 million years old, are considered
unreliable.[27] A 2019 assessment moves the extinction date back to earlier in the
Pliocene, 3.6 mya.[28]
Megalodon is now considered to be a member of the family Otodontidae,
genus Otodus, as opposed to its previous classification into Lamnidae,
genus Carcharodon.[26][12][27][6][7] Megalodon's classification into Carcharodon was due to
dental similarity with the great white shark, but most authors currently believe that
this is due to convergent evolution. In this model, the great white shark is more
closely related to the extinct broad-toothed mako (Isurus hastalis) than to
megalodon, as evidenced by more similar dentition in those two sharks; megalodon
teeth have much finer serrations than great white shark teeth. The great white shark
is more closely related to the mako shark (Isurus spp.), with a common
ancestor around 4 mya.[17][29] Proponents of the former model, wherein megalodon and
the great white shark are more closely related, argue that the differences between
their dentition are minute and obscure. [30]: 23–25
The great white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) and megalodon were previously thought to be close
relatives.[17][29]
Another model of the evolution of this genus, also proposed by Casier in 1960, is
that the direct ancestor of the Carcharocles is the shark Otodus obliquus, which lived
from the Paleocene through the Miocene epochs, 60 mya to 13 mya.[29][31] The
genus Otodus is ultimately derived from Cretolamna, a shark from
the Cretaceous period.[6][33] In this model, O. obliquus evolved into O. aksuaticus,
which evolved into C. auriculatus, and then into C. angustidens, and then into C.
chubutensis, and then finally into C. megalodon.
Another model of the evolution of Carcharocles, proposed in 2001 by
paleontologist Michael Benton, is that the three other species are actually a single
species of shark that gradually changed over time between the Paleocene and the
Pliocene, making it a chronospecies.[22]: 17 [25][34] Some authors suggest that C.
auriculatus, C. angustidens, and C. chubutensis should be classified as a single
species in the genus Otodus, leaving C. megalodon the sole member
of Carcharocles.[25][35]
The genus Carcharocles may be invalid, and the shark may actually belong in the
genus Otodus, making it Otodus megalodon.[4] A 1974 study on Paleogene sharks
by Henri Cappetta erected the subgenus Megaselachus, classifying the shark
as Otodus (Megaselachus) megalodon, along with O. (M.) chubutensis. A 2006
review of Chondrichthyes elevated Megaselachus to genus, and classified the
sharks as Megaselachus megalodon and M. chubutensis.[4] The discovery of fossils
assigned to the genus Megalolamna in 2016 led to a re-evaluation of Otodus, which
concluded that it is paraphyletic, that is, it consists of a last common ancestor but it
does not include all of its descendants. The inclusion of the Carcharocles sharks
in Otodus would make it monophyletic, with the sister clade being Megalolamna.[6]
The cladogram below represents the hypothetical relationships between megalodon
and other sharks, including the great white shark. Modified from Shimada et al.
(2016),[6] Ehret et al, (2009),[29] and the findings of Siversson et al. (2013).[36][37][38]
Lamniformes Otodontidae
Kenolamna gunsoni
Cretalamna appendiculata
Cretalamna aschersoni
Megalolamna paradoxodon
Otodus obliquus
Otodus megalodon
Lamnidae
Isurus oxyrinchus
Carcharodon carcharias
Biology
Appearance
Since Carcharocles is derived from Otodus, and the two had teeth that bear a close
similarity to those of the sand tiger shark (Carcharias taurus), megalodon may have
had a build more similar to the sand tiger shark than to other sharks. This is unlikely
since the sand tiger shark is a carangiform swimmer which requires faster movement
of the tail for propulsion through the water than the great white shark, a thunniform
swimmer.[22]: 35–36 [40]
Size
Due to fragmentary remains, there have been many contradictory size estimates for
megalodon, as they can only be drawn from fossil teeth and vertebrae. [41]: 87 [42] The
great white shark has been the basis of reconstruction and size estimation, as it is
regarded as the best analogue to megalodon. Several total length estimation
methods have been produced from comparing megalodon teeth and vertebrae to
those of the great white.[39][43][10][7]
Size comparison of the great white and whale shark to estimates for megalodon
Proportions of megalodon at lengths of 3 m (9.8 ft), 8 m (26 ft), and 16 m (52 ft), extrapolated from extant
relatives, with a 1.65 m (5 ft 5 in) diver
Megalodon size estimates vary depending on the method used, with maximum total
length estimates ranging from 14.2–20.3 meters (47–67 ft).[39][10][7] A 2015 study
estimated the average total body length at 10.5 meters (34 ft), calculated from 544
megalodon teeth, found throughout geological time and geography, including adults
and juveniles.[11][12] In comparison, large great white sharks are generally around 6
meters (20 ft) in length, with a few contentious reports suggesting larger sizes. [44][45]
[39]
The whale shark is the largest living fish, with one large female reported with a
precaudal length of 15 meters (49 ft) and an estimated total length of 18.8 meters
(62 ft).[44][46] It is possible that different populations of megalodon around the globe had
different body sizes and behaviors due to different ecological pressures.
[12]
Megalodon is thought to have been the largest macropredatory shark that ever
lived.[39]
A 2020 study—looking at the dimensions of the modern great white, mako,
and Lamna sharks—suggested a 16 meters (52 ft) megalodon would have had a
4.65 m (15.3 ft) long head, 1.41 m (4 ft 8 in) tall gill slits, a 1.62 m (5 ft 4 in) tall dorsal
fin, 3.08 m (10 ft 1 in) long pectoral fins, and a 3.85 m (12 ft 8 in) tall tail fin.[8]
Mature male megalodon may have had a body mass of 12.6 to 33.9 metric tons
(13.9 to 37.4 short tons), and mature females may have been 27.4 to 59.4 metric
tons (30.2 to 65.5 short tons), assuming that males could range in length from 10.5
to 14.3 meters (34 to 47 ft) and females 13.3 to 17 meters (44 to 56 ft).[39]
A 2015 study linking shark size and typical swimming speed estimated that
megalodon would have typically swum at 18 kilometers per hour (11 mph)–assuming
that its body mass was typically 48 metric tons (53 short tons)–which is consistent
with other aquatic creatures of its size, such as the fin whale (Balaenoptera
physalus) which typically cruises at speeds of 14.5 to 21.5 km/h (9.0 to 13.4 mph).[47]
Its large size may have been due to climatic factors and the abundance of large prey
items, and it may have also been influenced by the evolution of regional
endothermy (mesothermy) which would have increased its metabolic rate and
swimming speed. The otodontid sharks have been considered to have
been ectotherms, so on that basis megalodon would have been ectothermic.
However, the largest contemporary ectothermic sharks, such as the whale shark, are
filter feeders, while lamnids are now known to be regional endotherms, implying
some metabolic correlations with a predatory lifestyle. These considerations, as well
as tooth oxygen isotopic data and the need for higher burst swimming speeds in
macropredators of endothermic prey than ectothermy would allow, imply that
otodontids, including megalodon, were probably regional endotherms. [48]
In 2020, Shimada and colleagues suggested large size was instead due
to intrauterine cannibalism, where the larger fetus eats the smaller fetus, resulting in
progressively larger and larger fetuses, requiring the mother to attain even greater
size as well as caloric requirements which would have promoted endothermy. Males
would have needed to keep up with female size in order to still effectively copulate
(which probably involved latching onto the female with claspers, like modern
cartilaginous fish).[49]
Maximum estimates
The first attempt to reconstruct the jaw of megalodon was made by Bashford Dean in
1909, displayed at the American Museum of Natural History. From the dimensions of
this jaw reconstruction, it was hypothesized that megalodon could have approached
30 meters (98 ft) in length. Dean had overestimated the size of the cartilage on both
jaws, causing it to be too tall.[50][51]
Reconstruction by Bashford Dean in 1909
In 2019, Shimada revisited the size of megalodon and discouraged using non-
anterior teeth for estimations, noting that the exact position of isolated non-anterior
teeth is difficult to identify. Shimada provided maximum total length estimates using
the largest anterior teeth available in museums. The tooth with the tallest crown
height known to Shimada, NSM PV-19896, produced a total length estimate of 14.2
meters (47 ft). The tooth with the tallest total height, FMNH PF 11306, was reported
at 16.8 centimeters (6.6 in). However, Shimada remeasured the tooth and found it
actually to measure 16.2 centimeters (6.4 in). Using the total height tooth regression
equation proposed by Gottfried and colleagues produced an estimate of 15.3 meters
(50 ft).[7][10]
In 2021, Victor J. Perez, Ronny M. Leder, and Teddy Badaut proposed a method of
estimating total length of megalodon from the sum of the tooth crown widths. Using
more complete megalodon dentitions, they reconstructed the dental formula and
then made comparisons to living sharks. The researchers noted that the 2002
Shimada crown height equations produce wildly varying results for different teeth
belonging to the same shark, casting doubt on some of the conclusions of previous
studies using that method. Using the largest tooth available to the authors, GHC 6,
with a crown width of 13.3 centimeters (5.2 in), they estimated a total length between
17.4 to 24.2 meters (57 to 79 ft) with a mean of 20.3 meters (67 ft).[10]
There are anecdotal reports of teeth larger than those found in museum collections.
[7]
Gordon Hubbell from Gainesville, Florida, possesses an upper anterior megalodon
tooth whose maximum height is 18.4 centimeters (7.25 in), one of the largest known
tooth specimens from the shark.[58] In addition, a 2.7-by-3.4-meter (9 by 11 ft)
megalodon jaw reconstruction developed by fossil hunter Vito Bertucci contains a
tooth whose maximum height is reportedly over 18 centimeters (7 in).[59]
Teeth and bite force
Reconstruction showing the position of the replacement teeth
The most common fossils of megalodon are its teeth. Diagnostic characteristics
include a triangular shape, robust structure, large size, fine serrations, a lack
of lateral denticles, and a visible V-shaped neck (where the root meets the crown).[30]:
55 [35]
The tooth met the jaw at a steep angle, similar to the great white shark. The tooth
was anchored by connective tissue fibers, and the roughness of the base may have
added to mechanical strength.[60] The lingual side of the tooth, the part facing the
tongue, was convex; and the labial side, the other side of the tooth, was slightly
convex or flat. The anterior teeth were almost perpendicular to the jaw and
symmetrical, whereas the posterior teeth were slanted and asymmetrical. [61]
Megalodon teeth can measure over 180 millimeters (7.1 in) in slant height (diagonal
length) and are the largest of any known shark species, [22]: 33 implying it was the largest
of all macropredatory sharks.[39] In 1989, a nearly complete set of megalodon teeth
was discovered in Saitama, Japan. Another nearly complete associated megalodon
dentition was excavated from the Yorktown Formations in the United States, and
served as the basis of a jaw reconstruction of megalodon at the National Museum of
Natural History (USNM). Based on these discoveries, an artificial dental formula was
put together for megalodon in 1996.[30]: 55 [62]
The dental formula of megalodon is: 2.1.7.43.0.8.4 . As evident from the formula,
megalodon had four kinds of teeth in its jaws: anterior, intermediate, lateral, and
posterior. Megalodon's intermediate tooth technically appears to be an upper
anterior and is termed as "A3" because it is fairly symmetrical and does not point
mesially (side of the tooth toward the midline of the jaws where the left and right jaws
meet). Megalodon had a very robust dentition, [30]: 20–21 and had over 250 teeth in its
jaws, spanning 5 rows.[22]: iv It is possible that large megalodon individuals had jaws
spanning roughly 2 meters (6.6 ft) across.[22]: 129 The teeth were also serrated, which
would have improved efficiency in cutting through flesh or bone. [17][22]: 1 The shark may
have been able to open its mouth to a 75° angle, though a reconstruction at the
USNM approximates a 100° angle.[39]
Coprolite attributed to megalodon
The coprolite remains of megalodon are spiral-shaped, indicating that the shark may
have had a spiral valve, a corkscrew-shaped portion of the lower intestines, similar to
extant lamniform sharks. Miocene coprolite remains were discovered in Beaufort
County, South Carolina, with one measuring 14 cm (5.5 in).[65]
Gottfried and colleagues reconstructed the entire skeleton of megalodon, which was
later put on display at the Calvert Marine Museum in the United States and the Iziko
South African Museum.[39][31] This reconstruction is 11.3 meters (37 ft) long and
represents a mature male,[39]: 61 based on the ontogenetic changes a great white shark
experiences over the course of its life.[39]: 65
Paleobiology
Range and habitat
Megalodon had a cosmopolitan distribution;[26][57] its fossils have been excavated from
many parts of the world, including Europe, Africa, the Americas, and Australia. [30]: 67 [67] It
most commonly occurred in subtropical to temperate latitudes.[26][30]: 78 It has been found
at latitudes up to 55° N; its inferred tolerated temperature range was 1–24 °C (34–
75 °F).[note 1] It arguably had the capacity to endure such low temperatures due to
mesothermy, the physiological capability of large sharks to conserve metabolic
heat by maintaining a higher body temperature than the surrounding water. [26]
Megalodon inhabited a wide range of marine environments (i.e., shallow coastal
waters, areas of coastal upwelling, swampy coastal lagoons, sandy littorals, and
offshore deep water environments), and exhibited a transient lifestyle. Adult
megalodon were not abundant in shallow water environments, and mostly inhabited
offshore areas. Megalodon may have moved between coastal and oceanic waters,
particularly in different stages of its life cycle.[22]: 33 [69]
Fossil remains show a trend for specimens to be larger on average in the Southern
Hemisphere than in the Northern, with mean lengths of 11.6 and 9.6 meters (38 and
31 ft), respectively; and also larger in the Pacific than the Atlantic, with mean lengths
of 10.9 and 9.5 meters (36 and 31 ft) respectively. They do not suggest any trend of
changing body size with absolute latitude, or of change in size over time (although
the Carcharocles lineage in general is thought to display a trend of increasing size
over time). The overall modal length has been estimated at 10.5 meters (34 ft), with
the length distribution skewed towards larger individuals, suggesting an ecological or
competitive advantage for larger body size. [12]
Locations of fossils
Megalodon had a global distribution and fossils of the shark have been found in
many places around the world, bordering all oceans of the Neogene.[70]
Prey relationships
Vertebra of a whale bitten in half by a megalodon with visible gashes from teeth
Though sharks are generally opportunistic feeders, megalodon's great size, high-
speed swimming capability, and powerful jaws, coupled with an impressive feeding
apparatus, made it an apex predator capable of consuming a broad spectrum of
animals. It was probably one of the most powerful predators to have existed. [30]: 71–75 [13] A
study focusing on calcium isotopes of extinct and extant elasmobranch sharks and
rays revealed that megalodon fed at a higher trophic level than the
contemporaneous great white shark ("higher up" in the food chain.)[72]
Fossil evidence indicates that megalodon preyed upon many cetacean species, such
as dolphins, small whales, cetotheres, squalodontids (shark toothed
dolphins), sperm whales, bowhead whales, and rorquals.[50][73][74] In addition to this, they
also targeted seals, sirenians, and sea turtles.[69] The shark was an opportunist
and piscivorous, and it would have also gone after smaller fish and other sharks.
[50]
Many whale bones have been found with deep gashes most likely made by their
teeth.[30]: 75 Various excavations have revealed megalodon teeth lying close to the
chewed remains of whales,[30]: 75 [31] and sometimes in direct association with them.[21]
The feeding ecology of megalodon appears to have varied with age and between
sites, like the modern great white. It is plausible that the adult megalodon population
off the coast of Peru targeted primarily cetothere whales 2.5 to 7 meters (8.2 to 23 ft)
in length and other prey smaller than itself, rather than large whales in the same size
class as themselves.[73] Meanwhile, juveniles likely had a diet that consisted more of
fish.[35][75]
Competition
Sharks often employ complex hunting strategies to engage large prey animals. Great
white shark hunting strategies may be similar to how megalodon hunted its large
prey.[88] Megalodon bite marks on whale fossils suggests that it employed different
hunting strategies against large prey than the great white shark. [50]
One particular specimen–the remains of a 9-meter (30 ft) long undescribed Miocene
baleen whale–provided the first opportunity to quantitatively analyze its attack
behavior. Unlike great whites which target the underbelly of their prey, megalodon
probably targeted the heart and lungs, with their thick teeth adapted for biting
through tough bone, as indicated by bite marks inflicted to the rib cage and other
tough bony areas on whale remains.[50] Furthermore, attack patterns could differ for
prey of different sizes. Fossil remains of some small cetaceans, for example
cetotheres, suggest that they were rammed with great force from below before being
killed and eaten, based on compression fractures.[88]
There is also evidence that a possible separate hunting strategy existed for attacking
raptorial sperm whales; a tooth belonging to an undetermined 4 m (13 ft) physeteroid
closely resembling those of Acrophyseter discovered in the Nutrien Aurora
Phosphate Mine in North Carolina suggests that a megalodon or O. chubutensis may
have aimed for the head of the sperm whale in order to inflict a fatal bite, the
resulting attack leaving distinctive bite marks on the tooth. While scavenging
behavior cannot be ruled out as a possibility, the placement of the bite marks is more
consistent with predatory attacks than feeding by scavenging, as the jaw is not a
particularly nutritious area to for a shark feed or focus on. The fact that the bite
marks were found on the tooth's roots further suggest that the shark broke the
whale's jaw during the bite, suggesting the bite was extremely powerful. The fossil is
also notable as it stands as the first known instance of an antagonistic interaction
between a sperm whale and an otodontid shark recorded in the fossil record. [89]
During the Pliocene, larger cetaceans appeared. [90] Megalodon apparently further
refined its hunting strategies to cope with these large whales. Numerous
fossilized flipper bones and tail vertebrae of large whales from the Pliocene have
been found with megalodon bite marks, which suggests that megalodon would
immobilize a large whale before killing and feeding on it. [13][50]
Growth and reproduction
Collection of teeth of juvenile megalodon and C. chubutensis from a probable nursery area in the Gatún
Formation of Panama
Marine mammals attained their greatest diversity during the Miocene, [30]: 71 such as
with baleen whales with over 20 recognized Miocene genera in comparison to only
six extant genera.[101] Such diversity presented an ideal setting to support a super-
predator such as megalodon.[30]: 75 By the end of the Miocene, many species
of mysticetes had gone extinct;[76] surviving species may have been faster swimmers
and thus more elusive prey.[22]: 46 Furthermore, after the closure of the Central
American Seaway, tropical whales decreased in diversity and abundance. [99] The
extinction of megalodon correlates with the decline of many small mysticete
lineages, and it is possible that it was quite dependent on them as a food source.
[73]
Additionally, a marine megafauna extinction during the Pliocene was discovered to
have eliminated 36% of all large marine species including 55% of marine mammals,
35% of seabirds, 9% of sharks, and 43% of sea turtles. The extinction was selective
for endotherms and mesotherms relative to poikilotherms, implying causation by a
decreased food supply[96] and thus consistent with megalodon being mesothermic.
[48]
Megalodon may have been too large to sustain itself on the declining marine food
resources.[97] The cooling of the oceans during the Pliocene might have restricted the
access of megalodon to the polar regions, depriving it of the large whales which had
migrated there.[99]
Competition from other predators of marine mammals, such as macropredatory
sperm whales which appeared in the Miocene, and killer whales and great white
sharks in the Pliocene,[76][80][102] may have also contributed to the decline and extinction
of megalodon.[26][22]: 46–47 [97] Fossil records indicate that the new whale-eating cetaceans
commonly occurred at high latitudes during the Pliocene, indicating that they could
cope with the increasingly prevalent cold water temperatures; but they also occurred
in the tropics (e.g., Orcinus sp. in South Africa).[80] The largest macropredatory sperm
whales such as Livyatan are best known from the Miocene, but persisted into the
Pliocene,[103] while others, such as Hoplocetus and Scaldicetus, survived until the
early Pleistocene. These may have occupied a niche similar to that of orcas before
eventually being replaced by them.[104]
The extinction of megalodon set the stage for further changes in marine
communities. The average body size of baleen whales increased significantly after
its disappearance, although possibly due to other, climate-related, causes.
[105]
Conversely the increase in baleen whale size may have contributed to the
extinction of megalodon, as they may have preferred to go after smaller whales; bite
marks on large whale species may have come from scavenging sharks. Megalodon
may have simply become coextinct with smaller whale species, such
as Piscobalaena nana.[100] The extinction of megalodon had a positive impact on other
apex predators of the time, such as the great white shark, in some cases spreading
to regions where megalodon became absent.[26][102][106] A 2019 study looking at
megalodon teeth from the North Pacific suggested that it died out much earlier about
4–3.6 million years ago, before typical prey items went extinct, due to both climate
change and resultant range fragmentation, as well as competition from the great
white.[28]
In popular culture
See also
For a topical guide to this subject, see Outline of sharks.
Sharks portal
References
1. ^ Jump up to: Agassiz, Louis (1843). Recherches sur les poissons fossiles [Research on
a b