THE GREAT WHITE SHARK Carcharodon carcharias (LINNÉ, 1758) IN THE PLIOCENE OF PORTUGAL AND ITS EARLY DISTRIBUTION IN EASTERN ATLANTIC
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7203/sjp.25.1.18902Keywords:
Sharks, Carcharodon carcharias, distribution, Pliocene, Portugal, eastern AtlanticAbstract
Fossil great white shark Carcharodon carcharias has been recognized for the first time in Portugal near Marinha Grande in Pliocene sediments. This occurrence further broadens its already huge distribution. It is indeed the first Pliocene shark so far identified in Portugal.
The great white shark is represented but by a single upper right lateral tooth lost after use from a ca. 4 m TL, adult individual.
The presence is very much in agreement with all known data about Iberian Peninsula, where it really has never been found in Miocene units but becomes common in lower Pliocene levels in Spain.
Although the evidence is typical, it is too scarce to allow much speculation on the species numerical importance. If however we take into account that no other shark teeth are known in the concerned sediments it can provisorily be accepted that its occurrence would be rather common.
This new record for the Pliocene in Portugal underlines the closeness of the first known occurrences for the eastern Atlantic, both in its northern (as this is the case) and southern parts as shown by the referred Pliocene fauna of Farol das Lagostas, Angola.
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This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.