Cetotheriidae


Cetotheriidae is a family of baleen whales. The family is known to have existed from the Late Oligocene to the Early Pleistocene before going extinct. Although some phylogenetic studies conducted by recovered the living pygmy right whale as a member of Cetotheriidae, making the pygmy right whale the only living cetotheriid, other authors either dispute this placement or recover Neobalaenidae as a sister group to Cetotheriidae.

Taxonomy

After its description by Brant in 1872, Cetotheriidae was used as a wastebasket taxon for baleen whales which were not assignable to extant whale families.
Comparing the cranial and mandibular morphology of 23 taxa, found Cetotheriidae in this traditional sense to be polyphyletic. Based on ten cranial characters, they also concluded that of the twelve included fossil baleen-bearing mysticetes, six formed a monophyletic group, Cetotheriidae sensu stricto.
Several phylogenetic studies since Bouetel & Muizon 2006 support the monophyly of a small group of core Cetotheriidae sensu stricto, archaic mysticetes with a cranium that have "a long ascending process of the maxilla with anteriorly diverging lateral border that interdigitates with the frontal" and some other characters. This group is limited to Cetotherium rathkii, Metopocetus durinasus, Mixocetus elysius, Herpetocetus scaldiensis, H. transatlanticus, H. bramblei, Nannocetus eremus, and Piscobalaena nana. The remaining genera placed in the family are considered Cetotheriidae sensu lato and are often referred to as the 'cetotheres'.
considered the primitive 'cetothere' Joumocetus the most basal named taxon of their new superfamily Thalassotherii and Balaenopteridae ) and suggested that the term "Cetotheriidae s.l." should be renamed "basal" or "stem thalassotherians". found that the pygmy right whale formed a well-supported clade with Eschrichtiidae and Balaenopteridae based on molecular data, and that, within 'cetotheres', it was most closely related to the herpetocetines Bisconti et al. 2013, however, found, based on morphological data, it to be more closely related to Balaenidae, but added that additional specimens are expected to resolve these conflicting results within a few years.
Classification of Cetotheriidae according to Eli Adli et al. and the Fossilworks online database:
Incertae sedis: