Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Researcher­s dispute claim that ancient whale was heaviest animal ever

- By Carl Zimmer

Last August, a team of paleontolo­gists announced that they had discovered the fossilized bones of a gigantic ancient whale. Perucetus, as they named it, might have weighed over 200 tons, which would make it the heaviest animal that has ever lived.

But in a study published Thursday Feb. 29, a pair of scientists have challenged that bold claim. “The numbers don't make any sense,” said Nicholas Pyenson, a paleontolo­gist at the Smithsonia­n National Museum of Natural History and one of the authors of the new study.

In their new analysis, Pyenson and Ryosuke Motani, a paleontolo­gist at UC Davis, concluded that Perucetus probably weighed 60 to 70 tons, which would have made it about the size of a sperm whale.

They also analyzed fossils of blue whales and provided a new estimate of the weight of that species. They concluded that blue whales weigh up to 270 tons — much more than previous estimates, of up to 150 tons — which would make them far and away the heaviest known species in the history of the animal kingdom.

Perucetus first came to light in 2010, when Mario Urbina, a paleontolo­gist at the Museum of Natural History at the National University of San Marcos in Lima, Peru, spotted a bone in a desert in southern Peru.

He and his colleagues excavated 13 vertebrae, four ribs and part of a pelvis.

The bones had many hallmarks of whales' bones. But they were also astonishin­gly large and heavy. Urbina and his colleagues reconstruc­ted the full skeleton of Perucetus by studying the much smaller whales that lived at the same time. They also drew inspiratio­n from living manatees, which have dense skeletons that let them stay underwater to graze on seagrass.

Urbina and his colleagues ended up with a reconstruc­tion of a bizarre animal. It had an enormous éclair-shaped trunk, a tiny head, flippers and vestigial hind legs.

But Motani, an expert on reconstruc­ting the bodies of extinct marine animals, was puzzled by their conclusion­s. “I thought, how could it be? How can you pack that mass into that volume?” he said.

Motani contacted Pyenson,

an expert on whale fossils. They both felt that modeling Perucetus after manatees was a mistake, since only whales have evolved to truly gigantic sizes.

“It's really important to compare apples to apples,” Pyenson said.

For their own study, Pyenson and Motani took a fresh look at living whales. Since no one can haul a live blue whale onto a scale, no one has ever made a precise measuremen­t of its weight. Pyenson and Motani dredged up data collected by Japanese whaling ships in the 1940s, and used that as the basis for a new estimate.

They also created a three-dimensiona­l model of the blue whale, and used it to make a model of Perucetus. With this approach, they estimated that Perucetus weighed 60 to 70 tons, much less than the other research team had concluded.

Eli Amson, an expert on bone tissue at the State Museum

of Natural History in Stuttgart, Germany, and an author on the original study, disagreed with the new approach. “This extinct whale had a very different biology than that of recent whales,” he said.

Amson said that he and his colleagues are now making their own 3D model of the ancient species. They are finding that Perucetus was even more manateelik­e than they originally believed, strengthen­ing their conclusion that it rivaled or surpassed the blue whale in weight, he said.

Pyenson said Perucetus remains a major discovery, despite the smaller size he and Motani are suggesting. Paleontolo­gists have long believed that whales evolved to huge sizes only in the past few million years. Even at 60 tons, Perucetus would have been a giant among early whales.

“Whales were clearly exploring big sizes,” Pyenson said.

 ?? CULLEN TOWNSEND VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? An illustrati­on provided by Cullen Townsend shows a comparison of Perucetus colossus, right, with a blue whale. A new study argues that Perucetus, an ancient whale species, was certainly big, but not as big as today's blue whales.
CULLEN TOWNSEND VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES An illustrati­on provided by Cullen Townsend shows a comparison of Perucetus colossus, right, with a blue whale. A new study argues that Perucetus, an ancient whale species, was certainly big, but not as big as today's blue whales.

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