4.6 Article

A new caimanine alligatorid from the Middle Eocene of Southwest Texas and implications for spatial and temporal shifts in Paleogene crocodyliform diversity

Journal

PEERJ
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PEERJ INC
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.10665

Keywords

Cenozoic; Caimaninae; Diversity; Climate change; Fossils; Devil's Graveyard Formation; Species distribution

Funding

  1. Jackson School of Geosciences, The University of Texas at Austin
  2. UT College of Liberal Arts
  3. Society of Vertebrate Paleontology
  4. Department of Geosciences at Virginia Tech

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Dramatic early Cenozoic climatic shifts led to global faunal reorganization, with various vertebrate groups widespread in the warm, greenhouse conditions of the early Eocene but experiencing a significant drop in diversity near the Eocene-Oligocene boundary. This period also saw the introduction of more dry-tolerant taxa, as well as a loss of diversity in crocodyliforms.
Dramatic early Cenozoic climatic shifts resulted in faunal reorganization on a global scale. Among vertebrates, multiple groups of mammals (e.g., adapiform and omomyiform primates, mesonychids, taeniodonts, dichobunid artiodactyls) are well known from the Western Interior of North America in the warm, greenhouse conditions of the early Eocene, but a dramatic drop in the diversity of these groups, along with the introduction of more dry-tolerant taxa, occurred near the Eocene-Oligocene boundary. Crocodyliforms underwent a striking loss of diversi ty at this time as well. Pre-Uintan crocodyliform assemblages in the central Western Interior are characterized by multiple taxa, whereas Chadronian assemblages are depauperate with only Alligator prenasalis previously known. Crocodyliform diversity through the intervening Uintan and Duchesnean is not well understood. The middle Eocene Devil's Graveyard Formation (DGF) of southwest Texas provides new data from southern latitudes during that crucial period. A new specimen from the middle member of the DGF (late Uintan-Duchesnean) is the most complete cranial material of an alligatorid known from Paleogene deposits outside the Western Interior. We identify this specimen as a caimanine based on notched descending laminae of the pterygoids posterior to the choanae and long descending processes of the exoccipitals that are in contact with the basioccipital tubera. Unlike Eocaiman cavernensis, the anterior palatine process is rounded rather than quadrangular. The relationships and age of this new taxon support the hypothesis that the modern distribution of caimanines represents a contraction of a more expansive early Cenozoic distribution. We hypothesize that the range of caimanines tracked shifting warm, humid climatic conditions that contracted latitudinally toward the hothouse-icehouse transition later in the Eocene.

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