Science. 1988 Jun 24;240(4860):1737. doi: 10.1126/science.240.4860.1737.
The fossil record of shallow marine organisms in the Hawaiian Archipelago and Emperor seamount chain indicates that reef corals were absent during the first half of the Tertiary. Their appearance during the early Oligocene, 34 million years ago, is associated with several paleoceanographic events that appear to have combined to intensify gradually gyral surface currents in the north Pacific. This association suggests that corals were absent in the early Tertiary because of isolation of the Hawaiian Archipelago from the Indo-West Pacific (IWP), the center of reef coral abundance and diversity in the Pacific. Today, the number of species of reef corals in Hawaii is less than 10 percent of the number of species in the IWP. Since their initial colonization, reef corals have been present continuously in the Hawaiian Archipelago, although not without taxonomic change. Episodes of extinction and recolonization are the most likely cause of change in species composition. Recolonization from the IWP may also explain the low rate of endemism (about 20 percent) in the present-day coral fauna.
夏威夷群岛和皇帝海山链的浅海生物化石记录表明,在第三纪的前半段时间里,珊瑚礁不存在。它们在 3400 万年前的早渐新世出现,与几个古海洋学事件有关,这些事件似乎共同作用,逐渐加剧了北太平洋的旋流表面流。这种关联表明,在第三纪早期,珊瑚的缺失是由于夏威夷群岛与太平洋中珊瑚丰度和多样性的中心——印度-西太平洋(IWP)的隔离。如今,夏威夷的珊瑚物种数量不到 IWP 的 10%。自最初的殖民化以来,珊瑚礁一直在夏威夷群岛上持续存在,尽管并非没有分类变化。灭绝和再殖民化事件是物种组成变化的最可能原因。来自 IWP 的再殖民化也可能解释了现今珊瑚动物群中低特有性(约 20%)的原因。