32 research outputs found

    New Species and New Records of Marine Mollusca From Australia

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    Anomaluroid rodents from the earliest Oligocene of Dakhla, Morocco, reveal the long-lived and morphologically conservative pattern of the Anomaluridae and Nonanomaluridae during the Tertiary in Africa

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    <p>Recent palaeontological field campaigns in the westernmost part of the Sahara (Dakhla region, Morocco) have resulted in the discovery of a mammal assemblage including anomaluroid rodents. This new fauna comes from the uppermost part of the Samlat Formation, which contains estuarine deposits dating from the earliest Oligocene. The anomaluroid record from Dakhla (C<sub>2</sub>) comprises at least five sympatric taxa distributed among four different groups (Anomaluridae, Zenkerellinae, Nonanomaluridae and ?Zegdoumyidae), and includes two new species attributed to <i>Paranomalurus</i> Lavocat, <a href="#cit0032" target="_blank">1973</a> (<i>P. riodeoroensis</i> Marivaux sp. nov.; Anomaluridae) and <i>Nonanomalurus</i> Pickford <i>et al.</i>, <a href="#cit0051" target="_blank">2013</a> (<i>N. parvus</i> Marivaux sp. nov.; Nonanomaluridae), genera well known from the early Miocene of Sub-Saharan Africa. Three other new anomaluroid taxa – a diminutive anomalurid, <i>Argouburus minutus</i> Marivaux gen. et sp. nov., a zenkerelline-like anomaluroid, <i>Oromys zenkerellinopsis</i> Marivaux gen. et sp. nov., and a ?zegdoumyid, <i>Dakhlamys ultimus</i> Marivaux gen. et sp. nov. – are also documented but remain poorly sampled. The presence in Dakhla (C<sub>2</sub>) of primitive representatives of two early Miocene anomaluroid genera (<i>Paranomalurus</i> and <i>Nonanomalurus</i>) and a possible zenkerelline extends back to the earliest Oligocene the stratigraphical range of these lineages. This exceptional record from Dakhla demonstrates that anomaluroids were diverse near the global cooling event recorded at the Eocene/Oligocene transition, thereby indicating that coastal forests situated in the tropical south-western margin of North Africa were locally less affected by the climatic changes. The occurrence of <i>Paranomalurus</i> and <i>Nonanomalurus</i> in the earliest Oligocene reveals the surprisingly long-lived evolutionary pattern of these two genera, which otherwise remained highly conservative through time, especially regarding dental patterns. Considering the palaeontological data so far available and our proposed phylogenetic context including a comprehensive taxonomic sampling for anomaluroids, it appears that the divergences of extant lineages (<i>Anomalurus</i>, <i>Idiurus</i> and <i>Zenkerella</i>) were very ancient, and probably can be traced back to the Eocene. Based on our phylogenetic results, some systematic and macroevolutionary implications related to the Anomaluroidea are discussed, with a special emphasis on the <i>Zenkerella</i> lineage, which is regarded here as possibly outside the Anomaluridae.</p> <p><a href="http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:92621503-34A0-4A61-BB87-2F7D04D66728" target="_blank">http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:92621503-34A0-4A61-BB87-2F7D04D66728</a></p
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