Caught in the act: the first record of copulating fossil vertebrates

The behaviour of fossil organisms can typically be inferred only indirectly, but rare fossil finds can provide surprising insights. Here, we report from the Eocene Messel Pit Fossil Site between Darmstadt and Frankfurt, Germany numerous pairs of the fossil carettochelyid turtle Allaeochelys crassesc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biology letters (2005) 2012-10, Vol.8 (5), p.846-848
Hauptverfasser: Joyce, Walter G., Micklich, Norbert, Schaal, Stephan F. K., Scheyer, Torsten M.
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container_issue 5
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container_title Biology letters (2005)
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creator Joyce, Walter G.
Micklich, Norbert
Schaal, Stephan F. K.
Scheyer, Torsten M.
description The behaviour of fossil organisms can typically be inferred only indirectly, but rare fossil finds can provide surprising insights. Here, we report from the Eocene Messel Pit Fossil Site between Darmstadt and Frankfurt, Germany numerous pairs of the fossil carettochelyid turtle Allaeochelys crassesculpta that represent for the first time among fossil vertebrates couples that perished during copulation. Females of this taxon can be distinguished from males by their relatively shorter tails and development of plastral kinesis. The preservation of mating pairs has important taphonomic implications for the Messel Pit Fossil Site, as it is unlikely that the turtles would mate in poisonous surface waters. Instead, the turtles initiated copulation in habitable surface waters, but perished when their skin absorbed poisons while sinking into toxic layers. The mating pairs from Messel are therefore more consistent with a stratified, volcanic maar lake with inhabitable surface waters and a deadly abyss.
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subjects Animals
Carettochelyidae
Carettochelys insculpta
Copulation
Ethology
Female
Fossils
Germany
Male
Palaeontology
Paleontology - methods
Sex Characteristics
Sexual Behavior, Animal
Taphonomy
Testudines
Turtles - physiology
Vertebrates - physiology
Water Pollutants - toxicity
title Caught in the act: the first record of copulating fossil vertebrates
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