Biogeographic and evolutionary implications of a diverse paleobiota in amber from the early Eocene of India

被引:189
|
作者
Rust, Jes [1 ]
Singh, Hukam [2 ]
Rana, Rajendra S. [3 ]
McCann, Tom [1 ]
Singh, Lacham [3 ]
Anderson, Ken [4 ]
Sarkar, Nivedita [5 ]
Nascimbene, Paul C. [6 ]
Stebner, Frauke [1 ]
Thomas, Jennifer C. [7 ,8 ]
Kraemer, Monica Solorzano [1 ,9 ]
Williams, Christopher J. [10 ]
Engel, Michael S. [7 ,8 ]
Sahni, Ashok [5 ,11 ]
Grimaldi, David [6 ]
机构
[1] Univ Bonn, Steinmann Inst, D-53115 Bonn, Germany
[2] Birbal Sahni Inst Paleobot, Lucknow 226007, Uttar Pradesh, India
[3] Hemwati Nandan Bahuguna Garhwal Univ, Dept Geol, Srinagar 246174, Uttarakhand, India
[4] So Illinois Univ, Dept Earth Sci, Carbondale, IL 62901 USA
[5] Univ Lucknow, Ctr Adv Study Geol, Lucknow 226007, Uttar Pradesh, India
[6] Amer Museum Nat Hist, New York, NY 10024 USA
[7] Univ Kansas, Div Entomol, Nat Hist Museum, Lawrence, KS 66049 USA
[8] Univ Kansas, Div Entomol, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Lawrence, KS 66049 USA
[9] Senckenberg Res Inst & Museum, D-60325 Frankfurt, Germany
[10] Franklin & Marshall Coll, Dept Earth & Environm, Lancaster, PA 17603 USA
[11] Panjab Univ, Ctr Adv Study Geol, Chandigarh 160022, India
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
biogeography; arthropoda; eusociality; tropical forests; VASTAN LIGNITE MINE; MOLECULAR PHYLOGENY; FOSSIL RECORD; DISPERSAL; COLLISION; ASIA; PALEOBOTANY; DIVERGENCE; VICARIANCE; RADIATION;
D O I
10.1073/pnas.1007407107
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
For nearly 100 million years, the India subcontinent drifted from Gondwana until its collision with Asia some 50 Ma, during which time the landmass presumably evolved a highly endemic biota. Recent excavations of rich outcrops of 50-52-million-year-old amber with diverse inclusions from the Cambay Shale of Gujarat, western India address this issue. Cambay amber occurs in lignitic and muddy sediments concentrated by near-shore chenier systems; its chemistry and the anatomy of associated fossil wood indicates a definitive source of Dipterocarpaceae. The amber is very partially polymerized and readily dissolves in organic solvents, thus allowing extraction of whole insects whose cuticle retains microscopic fidelity. Fourteen orders and more than 55 families and 100 species of arthropod inclusions have been discovered thus far, which have affinities to taxa from the Eocene of northern Europe, to the Recent of Australasia, and the Miocene to Recent of tropical America. Thus, India just prior to or immediately following contact shows little biological insularity. A significant diversity of eusocial insects are fossilized, including corbiculate bees, rhinotermitid termites, and modern subfamilies of ants (Formicidae), groups that apparently radiated during the contemporaneous Early Eocene Climatic Optimum or just prior to it during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum. Cambay amber preserves a uniquely diverse and early biota of a modern-type of broad-leaf tropical forest, revealing 50 Ma of stasis and change in biological communities of the dipterocarp primary forests that dominate southeastern Asia today.
引用
收藏
页码:18360 / 18365
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] A dryinid wasp in Early Eocene amber from the Paris basin (Hymenoptera: Dryinidae)
    Peinado, J
    Nel, A
    Waller, A
    ZOOTAXA, 2006, (1168) : 31 - 41
  • [32] Icacinaceae fossil fruits from three sites of the Paris Basin (early Eocene, France): local diversity and global biogeographic implications
    Del Rio, Cedric
    De Franceschi, Dario
    GEODIVERSITAS, 2020, 42 (02) : 17 - 28
  • [33] Early post-embryonic polyxenidan millipedes from Saxonian amber (Eocene)
    Haug, Joachim T.
    Haug, Carolin
    Neumann, Christian
    Sombke, Andy
    Hoernig, Marie K.
    BULLETIN OF GEOSCIENCES, 2018, 93 (01): : 1 - 11
  • [34] A new species of Spalangiopelta (Hymenoptera; Pteromalidae; Ceinae) from Dominican amber: Phylogenetic and biogeographic implications
    Darling, DC
    JOURNAL OF THE KANSAS ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY, 1996, 69 (04) : 248 - 259
  • [35] Early Eocene artiodactyls (Mammalia) from western India
    Kumar, Kishor
    Rose, Kenneth D.
    Rana, Rajendra S.
    Singh, Lachham
    Smith, Thierry
    Sahni, Ashok
    JOURNAL OF VERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY, 2010, 30 (04) : 1245 - 1274
  • [36] A new caenogastropod assemblage from the early Eocene of the Cambay Basin, western India, and its palaeoenvironmental implications
    Banerjee, Sayoni
    Halder, Kalyan
    PAPERS IN PALAEONTOLOGY, 2024, 10 (05)
  • [37] New Eocene fossil fruits and leaves of Menispermaceae from the central Tibetan Plateau and their biogeographic implications
    Del Rio, Cedric
    Huang, Jian
    Liu, Ping
    Deng, Wei-Yu-Dong
    Spicer, Teresa E. V.
    Wu, Fei-Xiang
    Zhou, Zhe-Kun
    Su, Tao
    JOURNAL OF SYSTEMATICS AND EVOLUTION, 2021, 59 (06) : 1287 - 1306
  • [38] Miocene Ulmus fossil fruits from Southwest China and their evolutionary and biogeographic implications
    Zhang, Qiu-Yue
    Huang, Jian
    Jia, Lin-Bo
    Su, Tao
    Zhou, Zhe-Kun
    Xing, Yao-Wu
    REVIEW OF PALAEOBOTANY AND PALYNOLOGY, 2018, 259 : 198 - 206
  • [39] The first keroplatid (Diptera: Keroplatidae) species from the Lower Eocene amber of Vastan, Gujarat, India
    Kraemer, Monica M. Solorzano
    Evenhuis, Neal L.
    ZOOTAXA, 2008, (1816) : 57 - 60
  • [40] Fossil Capsular Valves of Koelreuteria (Sapindaceae) from the Eocene of Central Tibetan Plateau and Their Biogeographic Implications
    Chen, Pei-Rong
    Del Rio, Cedric
    Huang, Jian
    Liu, Jia
    Zhao, Jia-Gang
    Spicer, Robert A. A.
    Li, Shu-Feng
    Wang, Teng-Xiang
    Zhou, Zhe-Kun
    Su, Tao
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PLANT SCIENCES, 2022, 183 (04) : 307 - 319