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Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.32582/aa.64.1.10

Did the smalleye hammerhead ever inhabit the Mediterranean Sea? A reappraisal of the only Italian record of Sphyrna tudes (Valenciennes, 1822)

Alberto Collareta orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-6513-8882 ; Department of Earth Sciences, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy
Simone Farina ; Natural History Museum, University of Pisa, Calci, Italy


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Abstract

Three species of Sphyrna (S. lewini, S. mokarran and S. zygaena) are known to inhabit the present-day Mediterranean Sea, whereas uncertainties exist about the presence of S. tudes in the same basin. Indeed, the presence of this typically western Atlantic shark in the Mediterranean Sea is supported by as few as two historical specimens that were captured at Nice (southeastern France) and Leghorn (northern Tyrrhenian coast of central Italy). Here, we provide a redescription and an updated taxonomic identification of the Leghorn specimen of smalleye hammerhead, which is currently kept in the zoological collection of the Natural History Museum of the University of Pisa and is believed by some authors to represent a misidentified representative of S. lewini. Based on first-hand observations, we confirm the taxonomic identification of this specimen as belonging to S. tudes. Considering the ontogenetically young nature of both the Nice and the Leghorn specimens of S. tudes, parturition in the Mediterranean Sea is hypothesised, which in turn may evoke the occurrence of a population of smalleye hammerheads inhabiting this basin at least as recently as the early 19th century.

Keywords

shark; biodiversity loss; biogeography; Elasmobranchii; Sphyrnidae; Carcharhiniformes; historical collections

Hrčak ID:

304334

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/304334

Publication date:

14.6.2023.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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