Department of Anthropology, University of Massachusetts, 217 Machmer Hall, 240 Hicks Way, Amherst, MA, 01003, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL, 60115, USA.
BMC Evol Biol. 2020 Aug 8;20(1):97. doi: 10.1186/s12862-020-01628-1.
Was there a mid-Cenozoic vertebrate extinction and recovery event in Madagascar and, if so, what are its implications for the evolution of lemurs? The near lack of an early and mid-Cenozoic fossil record on Madagascar has inhibited direct testing of any such hypotheses. We compare the terrestrial vertebrate fauna of Madagascar in the Holocene to that of early Cenozoic continental Africa to shed light on the probability of a major mid-Cenozoic lemur extinction event, followed by an "adaptive radiation" or recovery. We also use multiple analytic approaches to test competing models of lemur diversification and the null hypothesis that no unusual mid-Cenozoic extinction of lemurs occurred.
Comparisons of the terrestrial vertebrate faunas of the early Cenozoic on continental Africa and Holocene on Madagascar support the inference that Madagascar suffered a major mid-Cenozoic extinction event. Evolutionary modeling offers some corroboration, although the level of support varies by phylogeny and model used. Using the lemur phylogeny and divergence dates generated by Kistler and colleagues, RPANDA and TESS offer moderate support for the occurrence of unusual extinction at or near the Eocene-Oligocene (E-O) boundary (34 Ma). TreePar, operating under the condition of obligate mass extinction, found peak diversification at 31 Ma, and low probability of survival of prior lineages. Extinction at the E-O boundary received greater support than other candidate extinctions or the null hypothesis of no major extinction. Using the lemur phylogeny and divergence dates generated by Herrera & Dàvalos, evidence for large-scale extinction diminishes and its most likely timing shifts to before 40 Ma, which fails to conform to global expectations.
While support for large-scale mid-Cenozoic lemur extinction on Madagascar based on phylogenetic modeling is inconclusive, the African fossil record does provide indirect support. Furthermore, a major extinction and recovery of lemuriforms during the Eocene-Oligocene transition (EOT) would coincide with other major vertebrate extinctions in North America, Europe, and Africa. It would suggest that Madagascar's lemurs were impacted by the climate shift from "greenhouse" to "ice-house" conditions that occurred at that time. This could, in turn, help to explain some of the peculiar characteristics of the lemuriform clade.
马达加斯加是否发生过中生代中期的脊椎动物灭绝和复苏事件?如果是,这对狐猴的进化有何影响?马达加斯加早中和中生代化石记录的严重缺乏,阻碍了对任何此类假说的直接检验。我们将马达加斯加全新世的陆地脊椎动物群与早中生代非洲大陆的进行比较,以了解中生代中期狐猴灭绝事件发生的可能性,以及随后的“适应性辐射”或复苏。我们还使用多种分析方法来检验狐猴多样化的竞争模型,以及没有发生中生代中期狐猴不寻常灭绝的零假设。
对早中生代非洲大陆的陆地脊椎动物群与全新世马达加斯加的陆地脊椎动物群的比较支持了这样的推断,即马达加斯加发生了重大的中生代中期灭绝事件。进化模型提供了一些佐证,尽管支持的程度因系统发育和使用的模型而异。使用 Kistler 及其同事生成的狐猴系统发育和分化日期,RPANDA 和 TESS 为在始新世-渐新世(E-O)边界(34 Ma)发生不寻常灭绝提供了中等程度的支持。TreePar 在强制灭绝的条件下工作,发现峰值多样化发生在 31 Ma,而先前谱系的生存概率较低。E-O 边界的灭绝比其他候选灭绝或没有重大灭绝的零假设得到了更大的支持。使用 Herrera & Dàvalos 生成的狐猴系统发育和分化日期,大规模灭绝的证据减少,其最可能的时间转移到 40 Ma 之前,这与全球预期不符。
虽然基于系统发育建模的马达加斯加大规模中生代中期狐猴灭绝的支持尚无定论,但非洲化石记录确实提供了间接支持。此外,始新世-渐新世过渡时期(EOT)狐猴类的大规模灭绝和复苏,将与北美、欧洲和非洲的其他主要脊椎动物灭绝事件同时发生。这表明马达加斯加的狐猴受到了当时从“温室”到“冰室”气候转变的影响。这反过来又可以帮助解释狐猴类群的一些奇特特征。