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1.
Biol Lett ; 19(6): 20230124, 2023 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37340808

ABSTRACT

Fossil cetaceans are often found in Miocene marine outcrops across the globe. However, because this record is not homogeneous, the dissimilar increase in occurrences, along with the sampling bias has created regions with extensive records and others with great scarcity. Among these, the Caribbean has remained enigmatic due to the lack of well-preserved cetacean fossils. Here, we report new Caribbean fossil cetaceans from the Upper Miocene Chagres Formation exposed along Piña beach, Eastern Panama, including a scaphokogiine kogiid, an Acrophyseter-like physeteroid and the phocoenid Piscolithax. Along with previous records of the iniid Isthminia panamensis and the kogiine Nanokogia isthmia, the Chagres cetacean fauna shows some similarities with other Late Miocene cetacean communities such as the Californias in the North Pacific, although their closest affinities lie with the eastern South Pacific Pisco Formation, Peru. Such findings indicate that though deep and intermediate Caribbean-Pacific water interchange was reduced by the Middle Miocene due to the shallowing of the Central American Seaway, shallow waters marine connection that persisted until the Pliocene might have facilitated the dispersal of coastal species across both sides of the Isthmus.


Subject(s)
Colon , Fossils , Panama , Oceans and Seas , Caribbean Region
2.
PeerJ ; 8: e9051, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32391203

ABSTRACT

The occurrence and diversity of elasmobranchs from the Oligocene-Miocene boundary from Tropical America is poorly known in comparison with the paleodiversity from younger Neogene intervals of the region. Here we describe a new elasmobranch assemblage from the rich fossil site of Montañita-Olón (Dos Bocas Formation, Santa Elena, Ecuador), where other vertebrates have already been described: for example, sea turtles and cetaceans. We report a total of 27 elasmobranch taxa, 19 of which are new fossil records for Ecuador, 10 new records for the Central Eastern Pacific and four new records for South America. Additionally, in order to reconstruct the environment where these marine remains were deposited, we performed abundance, paleobathymetric and habitat preference analyses, concluding that they were likely deposited in an outer neritic (open shelf) environment. The study of Oligocene and early Miocene marine elasmobranchs faunas in Tropical America is key to addressing the issues in the evolutionary history of this group.

4.
PLoS One ; 10(4): e0123909, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25923213

ABSTRACT

Kogiids are known by two living species, the pygmy and dwarf sperm whale (Kogia breviceps and K. sima). Both are relatively rare, and as their names suggest, they are closely related to the sperm whale, all being characterized by the presence of a spermaceti organ. However, this organ is much reduced in kogiids and may have become functionally different. Here we describe a fossil kogiid from the late Miocene of Panama and we explore the evolutionary history of the group with special attention to this evolutionary reduction. The fossil consists of cranial material from the late Tortonian (~7.5 Ma) Piña facies of the Chagres Formation in Panama. Detailed comparison with other fossil and extant kogiids and the results of a phylogenetic analysis place the Panamanian kogiid, herein named Nanokogia isthmia gen. et sp. nov., as a taxon most closely related to Praekogia cedrosensis from the Messinian (~6 Ma) of Baja California and to Kogia spp. Furthermore our results show that reduction of the spermaceti organ has occurred iteratively in kogiids, once in Thalassocetus antwerpiensis in the early-middle Miocene, and more recently in Kogia spp. Additionally, we estimate the divergence between extant species of Kogia at around the late Pliocene, later than previously predicted by molecular estimates. Finally, comparison of Nanokogia with the coeval Scaphokogia cochlearis from Peru shows that these two species display a greater morphological disparity between them than that observed between the extant members of the group. We hypothesize that this reflects differences in feeding ecologies of the two species, with Nanokogia being more similar to extant Kogia. Nanokogia shows that kogiids have been part of the Neotropical marine mammal communities at least since the late Miocene, and gives us insight into the evolutionary history and origins of one of the rarest groups of living whales.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Fossils/anatomy & histology , Whales/anatomy & histology , Animals , Central America , Life , Panama , Peru , Phylogeny , Skull/anatomy & histology , Species Specificity , Whales/genetics
5.
Rev. biol. trop ; 60(2): 893-908, June 2012. graf, mapas, tab
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-657827

ABSTRACT

Environmental response in the Pacific to aseismic Cocos Ridge subduction (Panama and Costa Rica). The evolution of the marine communities along the Pacific coast of Central America, may have changed in response to the formation of the Isthmus of Panama. To evaluate the effect of the Aseismic Cocos Ridge (DAC) subduction on the marine benthic communities, we reconstructed benthic assemblages from Neogene fossiliferous formations in Burica and Nicoya peninsulas of Panama and Costa Rica. Paleoecological and paleoenvironmental conditions were reconstructed by comparing community structure from bulk fossil samples with dredge collections from modern Tropical American seas, using principal component analysis. Our results indicate that during the early Pliocene, before the closing of the Isthmus, some oceanic islands existed with moderate upwelling in the Burica region. After the closure, during the late Pliocene and early Pleistocene the collision of the DAC caused an uplift of the seafloor, where water depth of 2 300m became shallow waters of less than 40m depth. Meanwhile, upwelling intensified in the open ocean the uplift that had formed small islands in coastal areas of Burica, creating protected areas and limiting the upwelling effect that was given in open ocean. The subduction of the DAC continued until the islands were joined to the mainland and gradually disappeared, allowing the return of the upwelling. During the middle Pleistocene a second process of accelerated uplift ith speeds of 8m/1 000 years provoked again the elevation of the seafloor and later the elevation of the Talamanca Range. The new range formed a barrier that blocked the passage of the Trade winds, created new ecological conditions and optimized and allowed the growth of the best coral reefs in the coasts of the tropical Eastern Pacific (POT) between Panama and Costa Rica. Rev. Biol. Trop. 60 (2): 893-908. Epub 2012 June 01.


Con el fin de evaluar el efecto de la Subducción de la Dorsal Asísmica de Cocos (DAC) durante las etapas finales de la formación del Istmo. Realizamos muestreos con bultos en afloramientos fosilíferos en las penínsulas de Burica y Nicoya. Las condiciones paleoecológicas y paleoambientales fueron reconstruidas a partir de la comparación entre la estructura de las comunidades fósiles, con las comunidades modernas dragadas de los mares de Panamá, usando análisis de componentes principales. Los resultados indican que antes del cierre del Istmo, existieron islas oceánicas y un afloramiento moderado en Burica. Posterior al cierre, el choque de la DAC provocó la elevación del fondo marino y las aguas que se encontraban a 2 300m pasaron a 40m. El afloramiento se intensificaba en mar abierto pero la dorsal había formado islas en Burica que limitaban el efecto del afloramiento en la costa. La subducción de la DAC continuó y las islas se unieron gradualmente a tierra firme y desaparecieron, permitiendo el afloramiento. Durante el Pleistoceno medio un segundo proceso de levantamiento acelerado continuó elevando el fondo marino y formó la Cordillera de Talamanca. La cordillera creó una barrera que bloqueó el paso de los vientos Alisios y originó condiciones ecológicas y optimas que permiten el crecimiento de los mejores arrecifes de coral costeros del Pacífico oriental tropical (POT) entre Panamá y Costa Rica.


Subject(s)
Environment , Fossils , Oceans and Seas , Costa Rica , Geography , Panama
6.
Rev Biol Trop ; 60(2): 893-908, 2012 Jun.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23894954

ABSTRACT

The evolution of the marine communities along the Pacific coast of Central America, may have changed in response to the formation of the Isthmus of Panama. To evaluate the effect of the Aseismic Cocos Ridge (DAC) subduction on the marine benthic communities, we reconstructed benthic assemblages from Neogene fossiliferous formations in Burica and Nicoya peninsulas of Panama and Costa Rica. Paleoecological and paleoenvironmental conditions were reconstructed by comparing community structure from bulk fossil samples with dredge collections from modern Tropical American seas, using principal component analysis. Our results indicate that during the early Pliocene, before the closing of the Isthmus, some oceanic islands existed with moderate upwelling in the Burica region. After the closure, during the late Pliocene and early Pleistocene the collision of the DAC caused an uplift of the seafloor, where water depth of 2 300m became shallow waters of less than 40m depth. Meanwhile, upwelling intensified in the open ocean the uplift that had formed small islands in coastal areas of Burica, creating protected areas and limiting the upwelling effect that was given in open ocean. The subduction of the DAC continued until the islands were joined to the mainland and gradually disappeared, allowing the return of the upwelling. During the middle Pleistocene a second process of accelerated uplift with speeds of 8m/1000 years provoked again the elevation of the seafloor and later the elevation of the Talamanca Range. The new range formed a barrier that blocked the passage of the Trade winds, created new ecological conditions and optimized and allowed the growth of the best coral reefs in the coasts of the tropical Eastern Pacific (POT) between Panama and Costa Rica.


Subject(s)
Environment , Fossils , Oceans and Seas , Costa Rica , Geography , Panama
7.
Med. clín (Ed. impr.) ; 115(19): 721-725, dic. 2000.
Article in Es | IBECS | ID: ibc-7109

ABSTRACT

FUNDAMENTO: La aparición de fracaso renal agudo (FRA) en la pancreatitis aguda grave (PAG) supone una elevada mortalidad. No existen parámetros que definan los pacientes con mayor probabilidad de desarrollarlo. Pretendemos determinar la incidencia y definir variables predictoras de aparición y mortalidad.MATERIAL Y MÉTODO: Estudio retrospectivo de todas las PAG ingresadas en la unidad de cuidados intensivos entre 1991 y 1998 (n = 154).RESULTADO: La incidencia de FRA fue del 42 por ciento (60 por ciento durante el primer día). La alteración de los parámetros hemodinámicos, el índice APACHE II y la puntuación de Ranson se relacionaron con su aparición. El 62,2 por ciento de los casos graves aparecen tras un fracaso multiorgánico (FMO). La mortalidad fue del 71,2 por ciento frente al 6,8 por ciento en pacientes sin FRA (en episodios de gravedad media del 39,9 por ciento, y en graves del 94,6 por ciento). La etiología condicionó la mortalidad (prerrenal [46,4 por ciento], tras hipotensión mantenida [71,4 por ciento] y FMO [93,3 por ciento]; p < 0,005). Precisaron reemplazo renal el 63,6 por ciento de los pacientes (hemofiltración [HF] el 95,5 por ciento), con una mortalidad del 89,3 por ciento (100 por ciento en hemodiálisis intermitente [HI] frente al 88 por ciento con HF). En el 32 por ciento de los pacientes con HF mejoró o se resolvió el FRA (si se inició precozmente la mortalidad fue del 76,9 por ciento frente al 100 por ciento en los tratamientos tardíos) (p < 0,001). El análisis de regresión presenta una relación significativa con la mortalidad para la gravedad del episodio de FRA y fracaso hemodinámico al ingreso.CONCLUSIONES: El fracaso renal agudo en la pancreatitis aguda grave es frecuente, aparece precozmente y ensombrece su pronóstico. La necesidad de tratamiento de depuración supone una mortalidad muy elevada. La hemofiltración parece presentar ventajas sobre la hemodiálisis intermitente. (AU)


Subject(s)
Middle Aged , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Male , Female , Humans , Survival Analysis , Incidence , APACHE , Multiple Organ Failure , Pancreatitis , Retrospective Studies , Prognosis , Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors , Antihypertensive Agents , Acute Disease , Adrenergic beta-Antagonists , Albuminuria , Hypertension , Acute Kidney Injury , Renal Dialysis , Follow-Up Studies , Pancreatitis
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