Department of Anatomical Sciences, Health Sciences Center, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York, United States of America; Department of Biomedical Sciences, Irvine Hall, Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, Ohio University, Athens, Ohio, United States of America; Center for Ecology and Evolutionary Studies, Irvine Hall, Ohio University, Athens, Ohio, United States of America.
Department of Biomedical Sciences, Irvine Hall, Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, Ohio University, Athens, Ohio, United States of America; Center for Ecology and Evolutionary Studies, Irvine Hall, Ohio University, Athens, Ohio, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Mar 19;9(3):e90415. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0090415. eCollection 2014.
The extant snake fauna has its roots in faunal upheaval occurring across the Paleogene-Neogene transition. On northern continents, this turnover is well established by the late early Miocene. However, this transition is poorly documented on southern landmasses, particularly on continental Africa, where no late Paleogene terrestrial snake assemblages are documented south of the equator. Here we describe a newly discovered snake fauna from the Late Oligocene Nsungwe Formation in the Rukwa Rift Basin of Tanzania. The fauna is small but diverse with eight identifiable morphotypes, comprised of three booids and five colubroids. This fauna includes Rukwanyoka holmani gen. et sp. nov., the oldest boid known from mainland Africa. It also provides the oldest fossil evidence for the African colubroid clade Elapidae. Colubroids dominate the fauna, comprising more than 75% of the recovered material. This is likely tied to local aridification and/or seasonality and mirrors the pattern of overturn in later snake faunas inhabiting the emerging grassland environments of Europe and North America. The early emergence of colubroid dominance in the Rukwa Rift Basin relative to northern continents suggests that the pattern of overturn that resulted in extant faunas happened in a more complex fashion on continental Africa than was previously realized, with African colubroids becoming at least locally important in the late Paleogene, either ahead of or as a consequence of the invasion of colubrids. The early occurrence of elapid snakes in the latest Oligocene of Africa suggests the clade rapidly spread from Asia to Africa, or arose in Africa, before invading Europe.
现存的蛇类动物群起源于古近纪-新近纪过渡时期的动物群剧变。在北方大陆,这种更替在中新世早期晚期就已经得到很好的确立。然而,这种转变在南方大陆的记录很少,特别是在非洲大陆,在赤道以南没有记录到晚古近纪的陆地蛇类动物群。在这里,我们描述了一个新发现的蛇类动物群,来自坦桑尼亚鲁夸裂谷盆地的晚渐新世 Nsungwe 组。这个动物群虽然规模较小,但种类繁多,有 8 种可识别的形态类型,包括 3 种蟒蛇和 5 种游蛇。这个动物群包括 Rukwanyoka holmani gen. et sp. nov.,这是已知最古老的非洲蟒蛇。它还为非洲游蛇科 Elapidae 提供了最古老的化石证据。游蛇类在动物群中占主导地位,占回收材料的 75%以上。这可能与当地的干旱化和/或季节性有关,反映了后来在欧洲和北美的新兴草原环境中栖息的蛇类动物群的更替模式。与北方大陆相比,鲁夸裂谷盆地中蛇类动物群的游蛇类主导地位的早期出现表明,导致现存动物群的更替模式在非洲大陆的发生方式比以前所认识的更为复杂,非洲游蛇类至少在晚古近纪就已经变得非常重要,要么是在游蛇类入侵之前,要么是作为入侵的结果。在非洲最晚渐新世出现的眼镜蛇表明,这个类群从亚洲迅速传播到非洲,或者在入侵欧洲之前就在非洲出现。