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马来半岛上新世猩猩(Pongo sp.)化石的首次发现:生物地理和古环境意义。

First discovery of Pleistocene orangutan (Pongo sp.) fossils in Peninsular Malaysia: biogeographic and paleoenvironmental implications.

机构信息

Department of Geology, University of Malaya, 50603 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

出版信息

J Hum Evol. 2013 Dec;65(6):770-97. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2013.09.005. Epub 2013 Nov 5.

Abstract

Nine isolated fossil Pongo teeth from two cave sites in Peninsular Malaysia are reported. These are the first fossil Pongo specimens recorded in Peninsular Malaysia and represent significant southward extensions of the ancient Southeast Asian continental range of fossil Pongo during two key periods of the Quaternary. These new records from Peninsular Malaysia show that ancestral Pongo successfully passed the major biogeographical divide between mainland continental Southeast Asia and the Sunda subregion before 500 ka (thousand years ago). If the presence of Pongo remains in fossil assemblages indicates prevailing forest habitat, then the persistence of Pongo at Batu Caves until 60 ka implies that during the Last Glacial Phase sufficient forest cover persisted in the west coast plain of what is now Peninsular Malaysia at least ten millennia after a presumed corridor of desiccation had extended to central and east Java. Ultimately, environmental conditions of the peninsula during the Last Glacial Maximum evidently became inhospitable for Pongo, causing local extinction. Following post-glacial climatic amelioration and reforestation, a renewed sea barrier prevented re-colonization from the rainforest refugium in Sumatra, accounting for the present day absence of Pongo in apparently hospitable lowland evergreen rainforest of Peninsular Malaysia. The new teeth provide further evidence that Pongo did not undergo a consistent trend toward dental size reduction over time.

摘要

本文报道了来自马来西亚半岛两个洞穴遗址的九颗孤立的化石猩猩牙齿。这些是在马来西亚半岛记录的第一批化石猩猩标本,代表了第四纪两个关键时期古老的东南亚大陆猩猩化石范围的重要向南延伸。来自马来西亚半岛的这些新记录表明,祖先猩猩在 50 万年前成功地穿越了大陆东南亚和巽他次区域之间的主要生物地理分界线。如果化石组合中存在猩猩遗骸表明存在森林栖息地,那么在最后一个冰河期,直到 6 万年前,Batu Caves 仍然存在猩猩,这意味着在假定的干燥走廊延伸到爪哇中部和东部至少一万年后,现在的马来西亚半岛西海岸平原上仍有足够的森林覆盖。最终,半岛在末次冰盛期的环境条件显然对猩猩不适合,导致了局部灭绝。随着冰河期后的气候改善和重新造林,新的海堤阻止了从苏门答腊雨林避难所的重新殖民化,这解释了为什么现在在马来西亚半岛显然适宜的低地常绿雨林中没有猩猩。这些新牙齿进一步证明,猩猩的牙齿大小随时间的变化并没有呈现出一致的缩小趋势。

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