The Late Middle Miocene Mae Moh Basin of Northern Thailand: The Richest Neogene Assemblage of Carnivora from Southeast Asia and a Paleobiogeographic Analysis of Miocene Asian Carnivorans

IF 1.1 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
C. Grohé, L. de Bonis, Y. Chaimanee, O. Chavasseau, M. Rugbumrung, C. Yamee, K. Suraprasit, Corentin Gibert, Jérôme Surault, C. Blondel, J. Jaeger
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

ABSTRACT The late middle Miocene fossil-bearing lignite zones of the Mae Moh Basin, northern Thailand, have yielded a rich vertebrate fauna, including two species of Carnivora described thus far: the bunodont otter Siamogale thailandica (known from over a 100 specimens) and the large amphicyonid Maemohcyon potisati. Here we describe additional carnivoran material from Mae Moh comprising new remains of Maemohcyon potisati as well as remains of seven new carnivorans belonging to at least four families: a new species of Siamogale (S. bounosa), a new species of another otter (Vishnuonyx maemohensis), one representative of the genus Pseudarctos (a small amphicyonid), a new genus of Asian palm civet, Siamictis, one representative of another civet (cf. Viverra sp.), a new species of mongoose (Leptoplesictis peignei) and a Feliformia indet. This carnivoran assemblage constitutes one of the richest for the middle Miocene of eastern Asia and by far the richest for the Neogene of Southeast Asia. While the presence of new species indicates a certain degree of endemism for the Mae Moh Basin, paleobiogeographic cluster analyses conducted on carnivoran faunas from the middle and late Miocene of Asia indicates that a southern Asian biogeographic province, analogous to the current Oriental Realm, has existed since at least the middle Miocene. These results strengthen the observation that the Himalayan Mountains and Tibetan Plateau constitute significant physical barriers as well as an important climatic barrier (through the strengthening of monsoon systems) preventing north-south mammal dispersals in Asia since at least the middle Miocene.
泰国北部中新世晚期Mae Moh盆地:东南亚最丰富的新第三纪食肉动物群和中新世亚洲食肉动物的古生物地理学分析
摘要泰国北部湄莫盆地中新世晚期含化石的褐煤带已形成丰富的脊椎动物群,其中包括迄今为止描述的两种食肉动物:布齿水獭Siamogale thailandica(从100多个标本中已知)和大型两栖动物Maemohcyon potisati。在这里,我们描述了来自Mae Moh的其他食肉动物材料,包括Maemohyon potisati的新遗骸以及属于至少四个科的七种新食肉动物的遗骸:Siamogale的一个新种(S.bounosa)、另一种水獭的一个新种(Vishnuonyx maemohensis)、Pseudarctos属(一种小型两栖动物)的一个代表、,另一种果子狸(参见Viverra sp.)、一种新的猫鼬(Leptoplecictis peignei)和一种Feliformia indet的代表。这种食肉动物群落是东亚中新世中期最丰富的群落之一,也是迄今为止东南亚新第三纪最富有的群落之一。虽然新物种的存在表明Mae Moh盆地具有一定程度的特有性,但对亚洲中新世中晚期食肉动物群进行的古生物地理聚类分析表明,至少从中新世中期开始,就存在着一个类似于当前东方王国的南亚生物地理区系。这些结果加强了观察,即喜马拉雅山脉和青藏高原构成了重要的物理屏障,也是一个重要的气候屏障(通过加强季风系统),至少从中新世中期开始,阻止了亚洲南北哺乳动物的迁徙。
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来源期刊
American Museum Novitates
American Museum Novitates 环境科学-动物学
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
6.70%
发文量
8
审稿时长
>36 weeks
期刊介绍: The Novitates (Latin for "new acquaintances"), published continuously and numbered consecutively since 1921, are short papers that contain descriptions of new forms and reports in zoology, paleontology, and geology.
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