Abstract
Sirenians have been extensively recorded from the Mediterranean and west European localities but there are only few finds to the east of it, from the area covered by the Paratethys. For the early Oligocene, to our knowledge, there are no published records of sirenians from inner seas of the Old World. Here we report a specimen of Dugongidae indet., consisting of two partial vertebrae and 12 fragments of ribs, collected in a manganese ore mine in Ukraine and dated as the earliest Oligocene (33–32 Ma). The specimens, as preserved, did not differ in morphology and size from ‘Halitherium schinzii’ and therefore can belong to Kaupitherium, at present the single early Oligocene genus recorded from Europe. However, its vertebral and rib anatomy is not specific for Kaupitherium, so we identify it only by family level. The marks of scavenging on a rib possibly are due to gastropod or bivalve mollusks. The sea, as suggested from biotic data, had a temperate or subtropical climate, relatively cold waters and high diversity of pelagic and deep-water habitats. Thus, the onset of the Oligocene was a period when sirenians could enter temperate inner Eurasian waters, a marginal area in their worldwide dispersal.
Acknowledgements
We are grateful to T.S. Ryabokon and T.V. Shevchenko (Institute of Geological Sciences, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Kyiv) for their comments on dating and stratigraphy of the fossil-bearing deposits, and T. Obadă (Institute of Zoology, Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Moldova) for the kindly provided collection of literature. We further wish to thank the editor G. Dyke for his effective management of our submission and the two anonymous reviewers for their constructive evaluation of the manuscript.