the larger marks are 'bear claw' - some like this, some don't.
personally, i find them desirable as they make the guitar top visually unique.
the smaller extensive horizontal markings are called 'silking' and are found only
in very high quality tops, usually a spruce, and indicate a perfect cut of quarter sawn wood - also highly desirable.
if you are not happy with the way a guitar looks, check with your distributor to see
if the guitar can be swapped out for another unless this one was a custom ordered LTD
edition in which case, there may be nothing you can do but do check with the selling company.
taylor is big on the naturalness of wood and values that in it's products so they probably saw nothing wrong when they sent it out.
unfortunately, some 'audio only is important' people can chime in telling you to ignore guitar aesthetics,
close your eyes or put a blindfold on when ever you take the guitar out of the case and just play.
don't listen to them, if they had their way, everybody would be playing a paddle headed Martin style D-18 and there would be
no sense in having different headstock shapes, inlays, trim or bridge pins with dots (as none of that should really matter)
unfortunately, when one spends a lot of money for a guitar, it does - - -