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Physeteridae (sperm whale)
Taxonomy
Physeteridae was named by Gray (1821). It is extant. It was considered monophyletic by Lambert (2008).
It was assigned to Carnivorae by Gray (1821); to Cete by Bonaparte (1850); to Denticete by Scammon and Cope (1869) and Gill (1871); to Denticete by Gill (1873); to Odontoceta by Ameghino (1889); to Odontocete by Scott (1873), Hay (1902) and Hay (1930); to Squaloceti by Abel (1914), Abel (1919), Dal Piaz (1929) and Van Deinse (1931); to Odontoceti by Winge (1921) and Slijper (1936); to Cetacea by Pictet (1853), Newton (1891) and Nowak (1991); to Odontoceti by Flower (1867), Flower (1883), Lydekker (1887), Cope (1889), Cope (1890), Flower and Lydekker (1891), Flores (1895), Weber (1904), Trouessart (1904), Case (1904), Abel (1905), True (1908), Jaekel (1911), Turner (1912), Miller (1923), Zittel (1925), Kellogg (1928), Weber (1928), Ellerman and Morrisson-Scott (1951), Scheffer and Rice (1963), Pilleri (1985), Carroll (1988), Vidal (1991), Benton (1993), Luo and Marsh (1996), Sach and Heizmann (2001) and Mead and Brownell (2005); and to Physeteroidea by Gray (1868), Gray (1871), Gill (1872), Simpson (1945), Fraser and Purves (1960), Ginsburg and Janvier (1971), Kasuya (1973), Gondar (1974), Barnes et al. (1985), Muizon (1990), Fordyce and Barnes (1994), Fordyce et al. (1995), Hirota and Barnes (1995), McKenna and Bell (1997), Rice (1998), Fordyce and de Muizon (2001), Rice (2002), Kazár (2002), Geisler and Sanders (2003), Gingerich (2005), Hampe (2006), Bianucci and Landini (2007), Foekens (2008), Whitmore and Kaltenbach (2008), Uhen et al. (2008), Lambert (2008), Rice (2009), Geisler et al. (2011), Valerio and Laurito (2012), Ormezzano and Lanzetti (2014), Aguirre-Fernández and Fordyce (2014), Marx et al. (2016), Collareta et al. (2017), Berta (2017), Alfsen et al. (2021) and Godfrey and Lambert (2023).
It was assigned to Carnivorae by Gray (1821); to Cete by Bonaparte (1850); to Denticete by Scammon and Cope (1869) and Gill (1871); to Denticete by Gill (1873); to Odontoceta by Ameghino (1889); to Odontocete by Scott (1873), Hay (1902) and Hay (1930); to Squaloceti by Abel (1914), Abel (1919), Dal Piaz (1929) and Van Deinse (1931); to Odontoceti by Winge (1921) and Slijper (1936); to Cetacea by Pictet (1853), Newton (1891) and Nowak (1991); to Odontoceti by Flower (1867), Flower (1883), Lydekker (1887), Cope (1889), Cope (1890), Flower and Lydekker (1891), Flores (1895), Weber (1904), Trouessart (1904), Case (1904), Abel (1905), True (1908), Jaekel (1911), Turner (1912), Miller (1923), Zittel (1925), Kellogg (1928), Weber (1928), Ellerman and Morrisson-Scott (1951), Scheffer and Rice (1963), Pilleri (1985), Carroll (1988), Vidal (1991), Benton (1993), Luo and Marsh (1996), Sach and Heizmann (2001) and Mead and Brownell (2005); and to Physeteroidea by Gray (1868), Gray (1871), Gill (1872), Simpson (1945), Fraser and Purves (1960), Ginsburg and Janvier (1971), Kasuya (1973), Gondar (1974), Barnes et al. (1985), Muizon (1990), Fordyce and Barnes (1994), Fordyce et al. (1995), Hirota and Barnes (1995), McKenna and Bell (1997), Rice (1998), Fordyce and de Muizon (2001), Rice (2002), Kazár (2002), Geisler and Sanders (2003), Gingerich (2005), Hampe (2006), Bianucci and Landini (2007), Foekens (2008), Whitmore and Kaltenbach (2008), Uhen et al. (2008), Lambert (2008), Rice (2009), Geisler et al. (2011), Valerio and Laurito (2012), Ormezzano and Lanzetti (2014), Aguirre-Fernández and Fordyce (2014), Marx et al. (2016), Collareta et al. (2017), Berta (2017), Alfsen et al. (2021) and Godfrey and Lambert (2023).
Subtaxa
Aulophyseter, Aulophyseterinae, Diaphorocetus (syn. Paracetus, Mesocetus, Hypocetus), Hoploceti, Hoplocetinae, Idiophyseter, Idiorophus (syn. Apenophyseter), Kogiopsis, Orca semseyi, Orcopsis, Orycterocetus (syn. Gargantuodon), Paleophoca, Physeter (syn. Meganeuron, Megistosaurus, Orthodon, Catodon, Cetus, Physalus), Physeteres, Physeterinae, Physeterula, Physodontidae, Physotherium, Placoziphius, Scaldicetus lodgei, Thalassocetus, Ziphioides, Ziphiola
Synonyms
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Synonymy list
Year | Name and author |
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1821 | Physeteridae Gray p. 310 |
1825 | Physeterina Gray p. 340 |
1836 | Catodontidae Cuvier p. 564 |
1846 | Catodontidae Gray p. 21 |
1850 | Physeteridae Bonaparte p. 1 |
1850 | Physeterina Bonaparte p. 1 |
1850 | Catodontidae Gray p. 44 |
1853 | Physeteridae Pictet p. 386 |
1859 | Paleophoca Van Beneden |
1864 | Catodontidae Gray p. 231 |
1866 | Catodontidae Gray p. 195 |
1867 | Physeteridae Flower p. 113 |
1868 | Catodontidae Gray p. 3 |
1868 | Physeteridae Gray p. 3 |
1869 | Physeteridae Scammon and Cope p. 20 |
1871 | Physeteridae Gill p. 123 |
1871 | Catodontidae Gray p. 58 |
1871 | Physeteridae Gray p. 60 |
1872 | Physeteridae Gill p. 96 |
1873 | Physeteridae Gill p. 27 |
1873 | Physeteridae Scott p. 107 |
1874 | Ziphiola Vanden Broeck p. 146 |
1874 | Ziphiola clepsydra Vanden Broeck p. 146 |
1876 | Orcopsis Van Beneden p. 489 |
1883 | Physeteridae Flower p. 184 |
1884 | Orcopsis Van Beneden p. 9 |
1886 | Physotherium Portis p. 325 figs. Plate VII |
1886 | Physotherium sotterii Portis pp. 325-326 figs. Plate VII |
1886 | Ziphioides Probst |
1886 | Ziphioides triangulus Probst p. 110 figs. Fig. 7b |
1886 | Ziphioides obliquus Probst p. 112 figs. Fig. 8b |
1887 | Physeteridae Lydekker p. 53 |
1889 | Physeteridae Ameghino p. 887 |
1889 | Physeteridae Cope p. 876 |
1890 | Physeteridae Cope p. 606 |
1891 | Physeteridae Flower and Lydekker p. 89 |
1891 | Physeteridae Newton p. 65 |
1893 | Physotherium Zittel p. 502 |
1894 | Physodontidae Lydekker p. 4 |
1894 | Ziphioides Paquier p. 47 |
1895 | Orcopsis Flores p. 12 |
1895 | Physeteridae Flores p. 13 |
1898 | Physotherium Trouessart p. 1054 |
1898 | Ziphioides Trouessart p. 1059 |
1898 | Ziphioides obliquus Trouessart p. 1059 |
1898 | Ziphioides triangulus Trouessart p. 1059 |
1899 | Orca semseyi Böckh p. 43 figs. Figure 1 |
1901 | Ziphiola Abel p. 41 |
1902 | Physeteridae Hay p. 595 |
1904 | Physeteridae Case p. 30 |
1904 | Orcopsis Palmer p. 478 |
1904 | Palaeophoca Palmer p. 505 |
1904 | Physotherium Palmer p. 537 |
1904 | Ziphioides Palmer p. 716 |
1904 | Orcinus semseyi Trouessart p. 771 |
1904 | Physeteridae Trouessart p. 772 |
1904 | Physotherium Trouessart p. 773 |
1904 | Physotherium solterii Trouessart p. 773 |
1904 | Ziphioides Trouessart p. 775 |
1904 | Ziphioides obliquus Trouessart p. 775 |
1904 | Ziphioides triangulus Trouessart p. 775 |
1904 | Physeteridae Weber p. 578 |
1905 | Physeteridae Abel p. 51 |
1908 | Physeteridae True p. 391 |
1911 | Physeteridae Jaekel p. 231 |
1912 | Physeteridae Turner p. 71 |
1914 | Physeteridae Abel p. 221 |
1917 | Scaldicetus lodgei Chapman p. 34 figs. Plate IV, Fig. 6 |
1919 | Physeteridae Abel p. 763 |
1921 | Physeteridae Winge p. 8 |
1921 | Physeterini Winge p. 8 |
1922 | Paleophoca Kellogg p. 111 |
1923 | Physeteridae Miller p. 40 |
1925 | Palaeophoca Zittel p. 78 |
1925 | Physeteridae Zittel p. 86 |
1928 | Ziphioides Kellogg p. 33 figs. Table 1 |
1928 | Physeteridae Kellogg p. 34 figs. Table 1 |
1928 | Physeteridae Weber p. 389 |
1929 | Physeteridae Dal Piaz p. 78 |
1930 | Physeteridae Hay p. 596 |
1931 | Physeteridae Van Deinse p. 33 |
1936 | Physeteridae Slijper p. 549 |
1945 | Ziphioides Simpson p. 101 |
1945 | Physeteridae Simpson p. 102 |
1951 | Physeteridae Ellerman and Morrisson-Scott p. 720 |
1960 | Physeteridae Fraser and Purves p. 112 figs. Figure 26 |
1963 | Physeteridae Scheffer and Rice p. 8 |
1971 | Physeteridae Ginsburg and Janvier p. 172 |
1972 | Palaeophoca Hendey p. 100 |
1973 | Physeteridae Kasuya p. 61 |
1974 | Physeteridae Gondar |
1975 | Ziphioides Mead p. 750 figs. Table 1 |
1977 | Paleophoca Ray p. 395 |
1980 | Physotherium Pilleri p. 51 |
1985 | Physeteridae Barnes et al. p. 26 |
1985 | Physeteridae Pilleri p. 30 |
1988 | Palaeophoca Carroll |
1988 | Physeteridae Carroll |
1988 | Ziphioides Carroll |
1990 | Physeteridae Muizon p. 297 |
1991 | Physeteridae Nowak |
1991 | Physeteridae Vidal p. 5 |
1993 | Physeteridae Benton p. 761 |
1994 | Physeteridae Fordyce and Barnes p. 428 figs. Table 1 |
1995 | Physeteridae Fordyce et al. p. 379 |
1995 | Physeteridae Hirota and Barnes p. 455 |
1996 | Physeteridae Luo and Marsh p. 331 |
1997 | Physeteridae McKenna and Bell p. 379 |
1997 | Paleophoca McKenna and Bell p. 380 |
1997 | Ziphioides McKenna and Bell p. 382 |
1998 | Physeteridae Rice |
2001 | Physeteridae Fordyce and de Muizon p. 179 |
2001 | Physeteridae Sach and Heizmann p. 42 |
2002 | Physeteridae Kazár p. 154 |
2002 | Paleophoca Kazár p. 163 |
2002 | Scaldicetus lodgei Kazár p. 163 |
2002 | Physeteridae Rice p. 231 figs. Table 1 |
2002 | Palaeophoca Sepkoski |
2002 | Ziphioides Sepkoski |
2003 | Physeteridae Geisler and Sanders p. 28 |
2004 | Scaldicetus lodgei Fitzgerald p. 206 |
2005 | Physeteridae Gingerich p. 237 figs. Table 15.1 |
2005 | Physeteridae Mead and Brownell p. 737 |
2006 | Physeteridae Hampe p. 65 |
2007 | Physeteridae Bianucci and Landini p. 45 figs. Table 2.1 |
2008 | Physeteridae Foekens p. 7 figs. Table 1 |
2008 | Physeteridae Lambert p. 293 |
2008 | Physeteridae Uhen et al. p. 574 |
2008 | Paleophoca Uhen et al. p. 577 |
2008 | Physeteridae Whitmore and Kaltenbach p. 236 |
2009 | Physeteridae Rice p. 235 figs. Table 1 |
2011 | Physeteridae Geisler et al. p. 5 figs. Table 1 |
2012 | Physeteridae Valerio and Laurito p. 153 |
2014 | Physeteridae Aguirre-Fernández and Fordyce p. 195 |
2014 | Physeteridae Ormezzano and Lanzetti p. 20 |
2016 | Physeteridae Marx et al. p. 123 |
2017 | Physeteridae Berta p. 161 |
2017 | Physeteridae Collareta et al. p. 269 figs. Figure 6 |
2021 | Physeteridae Alfsen et al. p. 809 |
2023 | Physeteridae Godfrey and Lambert p. 63 |
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If no rank is listed, the taxon is considered an unranked clade in modern classifications. Ranks may be repeated or presented in the wrong order because authors working on different parts of the classification may disagree about how to rank taxa.
Fm. Physeteridae Gray 1821 [sperm whale]
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G. †Aulophyseter Kellogg 1927
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†Aulophyseter mediatlanticus Cope 1895
†Aulophyseter morricei Kellogg 1927
G. †Diaphorocetus Ameghino 1894
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†Diaphorocetus ortegai Lambert et al. 2023
†Diaphorocetus poucheti Moreno 1892
Invalid names: Hypocetus Lydekker 1894 [objective synonym], Mesocetus Moreno 1892 [synonym], Paracetus Lydekker 1894 [objective synonym]
Subfm. †Hoplocetinae Cabrera 1926
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Invalid names: Balaenodon physaloides Owen 1846 [nomen dubium], Physetodon baileyi McCoy 1879 [nomen dubium], Physodon leccense Gervais 1872 [nomen dubium]
G. †Idiorophus Kellogg 1925
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†Idiorophus bolzanensis Dal Piaz 1916
†Idiorophus patagonicus Lydekker 1894
Invalid names: Apenophyseter Cabrera 1926 [synonym]
G. †Orycterocetus Leidy 1853
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†Orycterocetus cornutidens Leidy 1856
†Orycterocetus crocodilinus Cope 1867
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Invalid names: Gargantuodon ligerensis Ginsburg 1969 [synonym]
†Orycterocetus quadratidens Leidy 1853
Invalid names: Gargantuodon Ginsburg 1969 [synonym]
G. Physeter Linnaeus 1758
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†Physeter antiquus Gervais 1849
Physeter macrocephalus Linnaeus 1758 [sperm whale]
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Invalid names: Megistosaurus ensiformis Godman 1827 [synonym], Physeter catodon Linnaeus 1758 [synonym]
Invalid names: Catodon Linnaeus 1761 [synonym], Cetus Billberg 1828 [synonym], Meganeuron Gray 1866 [synonym], Megistosaurus Godman 1827 [synonym], Orthodon Rafinesque 1815 [synonym], Physalus Lacépède 1804 [synonym]
Invalid names: Aulophyseterinae Kazár 2002 [empty], Catodontidae Cuvier 1836 [synonym], Orca semseyi Böckh 1899 [invalid subgroup], Orcopsis Van Beneden 1876 [nomen dubium], Paleophoca Van Beneden 1859 [nomen nudum], Physeterina Gray 1825 [synonym], Physeterinae Flower 1867 [empty], Physodontidae Lydekker 1894 [invalid subgroup], Physotherium Portis 1886 [nomen dubium], Scaldicetus lodgei Chapman 1917 [nomen dubium], Ziphioides Probst 1886 [nomen dubium], Ziphiola Vanden Broeck 1874 [nomen nudum]
Diagnosis
Reference | Diagnosis | |
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K. Hirota and L. G. Barnes 1995 | A family of Odontoceti having cranium with large supracranial basin, bounded posteriorly by a high, transverse, semicircular nuchal crest and laterally by a maxillary crest; lacking a median crest or a fossa in the supracranial basin; lacrimal and jugal fused; jugular part of zygomatic process short and wide, not reaching posteriorly to contact zygomatic process of squamosal; palatines not forming part of anterior wall of narial passage; narial passages of disparate sizes with right naris being smaller; pterygoid enlarged, without reduplication, hamulus small; zygomatic process of squamosal not flaring laterally from braincase; posterior part of rostrum wide and flat; air-sinus system simple, without preorbital and postorbital lobes; left premaxillary foramen lost; mandibular symphysis elongate and narrow (mandible Y-shaped); teeth single-rooted and with conical crowns, homodont; tympanic bulla relatively small; mastoid process large; accessory ossicle on periotic; all cervical vertebrae except atlas ankylosed; forelimb short, humerus approximately equal in length to radius and ulna; olecra- non process of ulna large and triangular in shape. | |
M. D. Uhen et al. 2008 | The near-cosmopolitan living sperm whale Physeter catodon Linnaeus, 1758, or Physeter macrocephalus Linnaeus, 1758 (see Rice 1998 on nomenclature), is sufficiently disparate from the related living species of Kogia (Kogiidae) to be placed in its own family Physeteridae, or crown-Physeteridae. Many fossil species have been allied to Physeter, but nomenclature is confusing especially above genus-level; crown-stem terminology has yet to be applied to the Physeter lineage. The fragmentary and enigmatic late Oligocene Ferecetotherium kelloggi Mchedlidze, 1970, from Azerbaidjan is the oldest known sperm whale (Barnes, 1985c), making sperm whales the oldest surviving family-level clade of Odontoceti.
The distinctive skull form of Physeter macrocephalus reflects the unique morphology of cranial soft tissues, as documented by Raven and Gregory (1933), Fraser and Purves (1960), Heyning (1989a), Cranford (1999, Cranford et al. 1996), and others. Diagnostic bony features for Physeter (namely, for crown-Physeteridae) include: large absolute size; long flattened triangular rostrum with generally vestigial teeth; large supracranial basin with elevated maxillary walls that lie medial to antorbital notches and large slit-like dorsal infraorbital foramina; no facial sagittal crest or elevated postnarial vertex within the supracranial basin; parabolic posterior part of maxillary crest is confluent with nuchal crest of supraoccipital; teeth homodont; periotic with enlarged accessory ossicle; and cervical vertebrae 2-7 fused. Many fossils show some of these features, or others seen in Physeter but not detailed above, and there is little doubt that such fossils are in the Physeter lineage. For example, the Early Miocene Diaphorocetus poucheti (South Atlantic) has a supracranial basin but a more plesiomorphic brain case, which links it firmly with other odontocetes. Many fossil species, for example, in the genus Scaldicetus, retained the plesiomorphic condition of large functional teeth in both the upper and lower jaws (for example Hirota and Barnes, 1995), while others have small or vestigial upper teeth (for example Aulophyseter and Orycterocetus), as does living P. macrocephalus. The more archaic fossil sperm whales had enamel-covered tooth crowns, but in various later Tertiary fossil sperm whales the crowns of the teeth lack enamel, as does P. macrocephalus. The homodonty and enlarged supracranial basin in fossil Physeteridae have led, by analogy with the living P. macrocephalus, to the idea that sperm whales have mainly been deep-diving squid-eaters (e.g. Cozzuol, 1996). Miocene and Pliocene fossil sperm whales include many named species worldwide. Many taxa have been based on isolated teeth of uncertain taxonomic value (e.g. Kellogg 1925a), thus creating problems in understanding the taxonomy and history of the family. Subfamily groupings used within the Physeteridae include Physeterinae, Scaldicetinae, Hoplocetinae and Aulophyseterinae (e.g. Simpson 1945, Kazar 2002). The living P. macrocephalus is not known from the fossil record of North America. Despite reports cited by Dorr and Eschman (1970) and Holman (1995) of Physeter from Great Lakes deposits in Michigan, these specimens have been determined to be of historical (less than 1000 years) age and unlikely to have been naturally deposited (Harrington, 1988). |