The rise and fall of the Iberian cobras (Elapidae, Naja) in the context of their European and global fossil record

Author:

Villa Andrea1,Quadros Ana B.23,Delfino Massimo14,Luján Àngel H.1,Bolet Arnau156,Casanovas‐Vilar Isaac1ORCID,Robles Josep M.1,Alba David M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institut Català de Paleontologia Miquel Crusafont (ICP‐CERCA) Edifici ICTA‐ICP, c/ Columnes s/n, Campus de la UAB 08193 Cerdanyola del Valles Barcelona Spain

2. Museu de Zoologia Universidade de São Paulo Avenida Nazaré 481, Ipiranga 04263‐000 Sao Paulo Sao Paulo Brazil

3. Centre de Recherche en Paléontologie – Paris – Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle Sorbonne Université 8 rue Buffon 75005 Paris France

4. Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra Università degli Studi di Torino Via T. Valperga Caluso 35 10125 Torino Italy

5. Departamento de Estratigrafía y Paleontología Universidad de Granada Avda. Fuente Nueva s/n 18701 Granada Spain

6. School of Earth Sciences University of Bristol 24 Tyndall Avenue BS8 1TQ Bristol UK

Abstract

AbstractVery few remains of elapid snakes are known from the Iberian Peninsula, but these include a probable endemic extinct species of cobra, Naja iberica from the Late Miocene. We here describe isolated cobra vertebrae from several Middle–Late Miocene localities in the Vallès‐Penedès Basin (Catalonia, Spain). All of these fossils are herein referred to an indeterminate species of the genus Naja. These remains are the first conclusive evidence that cobras were present in Iberia before the Messinian Salinity Crisis, and that they persisted there throughout the Miocene (and ultimately until the Pliocene). Recently, a phylogeny of extinct Naja based on cranial and vertebral morphology recognized Niberica as a distinct lineage separate from the Central European one, represented mainly by Naja romani. However, due to taxonomic uncertainties, it is still unclear whether Iberian cobras were all part of a single lineage or whether several Naja lineages inhabited the Iberian Peninsula. They went extinct in Iberia before the end of the Pliocene. In the Vallès‐Penedès Basin, cobras were living in a mosaic environment, surviving through different phases characterized by different environmental features.

Publisher

Wiley

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