Scientists have analyzed the stomach contents of a coach-sized prehistoric whale, known as Basilosaurus isis, for the first time, finding that it was a fearsome apex predator in its day.
Now extinct, B. isis roamed the ancient seas between 38 and 34 million years ago when it would have been the largest whale of its time—alongside its sister species Basilosaurus cetoides—measuring up to 18 meters in length.
In 2010, researchers from the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin, Germany, discovered an intriguing adult specimen of B. isis at Wadi Al-Hitan, an important paleontological site around 90 miles southwest of Cairo.
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The UNESCO World Heritage Site—which was once a shallow sea— is known as the "Valley of the Whales" due to its extraordinary abundance of high-quality marine fossils, the remains of a wide range of ancient animals including rays, crocodiles and some of the earliest forms of whale.
Within the body cavity of the B. isis specimen, the German team found the bones of sharks, large fish and juveniles of a smaller species of prehistoric whale known as Dorudon atrox, many of which showed signs of breakage or bite marks.
In a study published in the journal PLOS ONE, they suggest that, given the available evidence, these bones represent the remains of animals that B. isis ate, indicating it was an apex predator that hunted its prey and not a scavenger.
"The find represents the first stomach contents found in B. isis, and as such reveals the first direct evidence for diet in that species," lead author of the study, Manja Voss, told Newsweek. "[This confirms] a long-suspected predator-prey-relationship of the two most frequently found fossil whales in Wadi Al-Hitan: 15-18-meter-long B. isis and 5-meter long D. atrox."
According to the study, several pieces of evidence led the team to this conclusion:
- The prey remains were clearly associated with the B. isis skeleton and found within the body cavity where the stomach could have been.
- Bite marks matching B. isis teeth were found on the head of the prey, an area of the body that the ancient whale preferred to attack.
- B. isis itself had a long snout and was armed with pointed incisors and sharp cheek teeth, indicating that the animal actively hunted.