Ankylorhiza
Ankylorhiza is an extinct genus of toothed whale that lived in what is now the United States during the Oligocene epoch, between 29 and 23.5 million years ago. The type and only known species is A. tiedemani, though two fossil skeletons may represent an additional, second species within the genus. Ankylorhiza was about long, with a long, robust skull bearing conical teeth that were angled forwards at the tip of the snout.
Ankylorhiza is the largest known Oligocene toothed whale and is one of the most completely known early members of this group, with characteristics intermediate between basal and derived cetaceans. The taxon would have had powerful jaw musculature and probably fed on large prey by seizing it and puncturing it with its robust teeth. The animal likely occupied a fast-swimming predator niche similar to that of living orcas.
Discovery and naming
The holotype of Ankylorhiza consists of a partial snout fossil discovered in the Ashley Formation of South Carolina, United States. The layers the bones were found in date to the Oligocene epoch of the Paleogene period, between 29 and 23.5 million years ago. In 1887, zoologist Joel Asaph Allen attributed AMNH 10445 to the extinct river dolphin Squalodon—now considered a wastebasket taxon—as a new species he named Squalodon ''tiedemani. The specific name tiedemani is in honor of I. B. Tiedeman, who discovered the fossils and donated them to the American Museum of Natural History, where they're currently stored.In a 2020 publication, paleontologist Robert Boessenecker and colleagues found the fossil snout to represent the same taxon as CCNHM 103, a nearly complete skeleton of large toothed whale found in the same formation; and CCNHM 220, a partial skull with associated vertebrae. They referred all of these fossils to the newly named and described dolphin genus Ankylorhiza, which "S''." tiedemani was synonymized with A. tiedemani as the only species. The generic name Ankylorhiza is Ancient Greek for "fused roots", alluding to the type of dentition exhibited by stem Odontoceti.
Description
Ankylorhiza had a long skull that measured at its widest point, and a total body length of around, making it the largest known toothed whale from the Oligocene epoch. In the early Miocene, greater lengths were attained by physeteroids within this group of whales.Ankylorhiza
The morphology of Ankylorhiza
Classification
Ankylorhiza was a member of the toothed whale parvorder Odontoceti. This group contains all cetaceans that feed with teeth, including dolphins, porpoises, beaked whales, sperm whales and others; baleen whales, in contrast, filter-feed using baleen plates in their mouths. In 2020, Boessenecker and colleagues phylogenetically placed A. tiedemani as a basal odontocete that split off between the xenorophids and squalodontids, in a position between the more basal family Basilosauridae and modern toothed whales. Along with Microcetus, Ankylorhiza is one of the most completely known early toothed whales. Boessenecker and colleagues found A. tiedemani to form a clade with specimens CCNHM 1075 and ChM PV2764, two undescribed Oligocene toothed whale skeletons found in Charleston, both of which may turn out to represent another species within the genus Ankylorhiza.The following cladogram is adapted from the results of Boessenecker and colleagues' analysis in 2020.
File:Ankylorhiza tiedemani holotype 2.jpg|thumb|upright=0.75|Holotype snout fossil of A. tiedemani in side view, and a fragment of the mandibular ramus in various views