A new gecko from the earliest Eocene of Dormaal, Belgium: a thermophilic element of the ‘greenhouse world’

Author:

Čerňanský Andrej1,Daza Juan D.2,Smith Richard3,Bauer Aaron M.4,Smith Thierry3,Folie Annelise5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology, Laboratory of Evolutionary Biology, Faculty of Natural Sciences, Comenius University in Bratislava, Mlynská dolina, Bratislava 84215, Slovakia

2. Department of Biological Sciences, Sam Houston State University, Huntsville, TX, USA

3. Directorate Earth and History of Life, Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, 29 rue Vautier, B-1000, Brussels, Belgium

4. Department of Biology and Center for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Stewardship, Villanova University, Villanova, PA 19085, USA

5. Scientific Survey of Heritage, Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, 29 rue Vautier, B-1000, Brussels, Belgium

Abstract

We here describe a new gekkotan lizard from the earliest Eocene (MP 7) of the Dormaal locality in Belgium, from the time of the warmest global climates of the past 66 million years (Myr). This new taxon, with an age of 56 Myr, together with indeterminate gekkotan material reported from Silveirinha (Portugal, MP 7) represent the oldest Cenozoic gekkotans known from Europe. Today gekkotan lizards are distributed worldwide in mainly warm temperate to tropical areas and the new gecko from Dormaal represents a thermophilic faunal element. Given the Palaeocene–Eocene thermal maximum at that time, the distribution of this group in such northern latitudes (above 50° North – the latitude of southern England) is not surprising. Although this new gekkotan is represented only by a frontal (further, dentaries and a mandibular fragment are described here as Gekkota indet. 1 and 2—at least two gekkotan species occurred in Dormaal), it provides a new record for squamate diversity from the earliest Eocene ‘greenhouse world’. Together with the Baltic amber gekkotan Yantarogekko balticus , they document the northern distribution of gekkotans in Europe during the Eocene. The increase in temperature during the early Eocene led to a rise in sea level, and many areas of Eurasia were submerged. Thus, the importance of this period is magnified by understanding future global climate change.

Funder

European Commission

Slovak Academy of Sciences, Grant

Grant Agency of the Ministry of Education of Slovak Republic and

Belgian Science Policy Office

BRAIN

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference70 articles.

1. Smith KT, Čerňanský A, Scanferla A, Schaal SFK. 2018 Lizards and snakes: warmth-loving sunbathers. In Messel, an ancient greenhouse ecosystem (eds KT Smith, SFK Schaal, J Habersetzer), pp. 122-147. Frankfurt am Main, Germany: Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung.

2. BiochroM'97. 1997 Synthèses et tableaux de corrélation. In Actes du Congrès BiochroM'97 Montpellier 21 (eds JP Aguilar, S Legendre, J Michaux), pp. 769-805. Mémoires et Travaux de l'Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, Institut de Montpellier, France.

3. Eocene continental climates and latitudinal temperature gradients

4. Persistent near-tropical warmth on the Antarctic continent during the early Eocene epoch

5. Die Verbreitung der Reptilia in den Klimazonen der Erde;Haller-Probst M;Cour. Forsch. Instit. Senckenberg,1997

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