Author
Listed:
- John Kappelman
(University of Texas)
- D. Tab Rasmussen
(Washington University)
- William J. Sanders
(University of Michigan)
- Mulugeta Feseha
(University of Texas)
- Thomas Bown
- Peter Copeland
(University of Houston)
- Jeff Crabaugh
(University of Wyoming)
- John Fleagle
(State University of New York)
- Michelle Glantz
(Colorado State University)
- Adam Gordon
(University of Texas)
- Bonnie Jacobs
(Southern Methodist University)
- Murat Maga
(University of Texas)
- Kathleen Muldoon
(Washington University)
- Aaron Pan
(Southern Methodist University)
- Lydia Pyne
(University of Texas)
- Brian Richmond
(George Washington University)
- Timothy Ryan
(Duke University)
- Erik R. Seiffert
(Duke University)
- Sevket Sen
(Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Laboratoire de Paléontologie)
- Lawrence Todd
(Colorado State University)
- Michael C. Wiemann
(USDA Forest Service, Forest Products Laboratory, One Gifford Pinchot Drive)
- Alisa Winkler
(Southern Methodist University
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center)
Abstract
Afro-Arabian mammalian communities underwent a marked transition near the Oligocene/Miocene boundary at approximately 24 million years (Myr) ago. Although it is well documented that the endemic paenungulate taxa were replaced by migrants from the Northern Hemisphere, the timing and evolutionary dynamics of this transition have long been a mystery because faunas from about 32 to 24 Myr ago are largely unknown1. Here we report a late Oligocene fossil assemblage from Ethiopia, which constrains the migration to postdate 27 Myr ago, and yields new insight into the indigenous faunal dynamics that preceded this event. The fauna is composed of large paenungulate herbivores and reveals not only which earlier taxa persisted into the late Oligocene epoch but also demonstrates that one group, the Proboscidea, underwent a marked diversification. When Eurasian immigrants entered Afro-Arabia, a pattern of winners and losers among the endemics emerged: less diverse taxa such as arsinoitheres became extinct, moderately species-rich groups such as hyracoids continued into the Miocene with reduced diversity, whereas the proboscideans successfully carried their adaptive radiation out of Afro-Arabia and across the world.
Suggested Citation
John Kappelman & D. Tab Rasmussen & William J. Sanders & Mulugeta Feseha & Thomas Bown & Peter Copeland & Jeff Crabaugh & John Fleagle & Michelle Glantz & Adam Gordon & Bonnie Jacobs & Murat Maga & Ka, 2003.
"Oligocene mammals from Ethiopia and faunal exchange between Afro-Arabia and Eurasia,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 426(6966), pages 549-552, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:426:y:2003:i:6966:d:10.1038_nature02102
DOI: 10.1038/nature02102
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