Argentina
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Transient presence of a teiid lizard in the European Eocene suggests transatlantic dispersal and rapid extinction
Fecha
2020-02Registro en:
Louis, Augé Marc; Brizuela, Santiago; Transient presence of a teiid lizard in the European Eocene suggests transatlantic dispersal and rapid extinction; Springer; Palaeobiodiversity and Palaeoenvironments; 100; 3; 2-2020; 793-817
1867-1594
1867-1608
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Louis, Augé Marc
Brizuela, Santiago
Resumen
Several teiid specimens (frontal, vertebra, maxillae) are described from the late Eocene of Europe (MP17, Phosphorites du Quercy). The results of phylogenetic analyses confirm that these European Eocene fossils belong to teiid lizards and more specifically to the subfamily Tupinambinae. So far, the Paleogene record of teiids is limited to South America and no occurrence of crown teiids is known in Europe. This disjunct distribution of teiids during the Eocene suggests transatlantic dispersal and this possibility is discussed. The presence of teiids in the European fossil record is brief (limited to standard level MP17). The circumstances that prevented the persistence of an invading clade in Europe are examined. Ecological (e.g. biotic interactions) and/or demographic (Allee effect) processes may have been involved.