First monk seal from the Southern Hemisphere rewrites the evolutionary history of true seals

Author:

Rule James P.12ORCID,Adams Justin W.1ORCID,Marx Felix G.34ORCID,Evans Alistair R.52ORCID,Tennyson Alan J. D.3ORCID,Scofield R. Paul6ORCID,Fitzgerald Erich M. G.527

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anatomy and Developmental Biology, Victoria 3800, Australia

2. Geosciences, Museums Victoria, Melbourne, Victoria 3001, Australia

3. Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Wellington 6011, New Zealand

4. Department of Geology, University of Otago, Dunedin 9016, New Zealand

5. School of Biological Sciences, Monash University, Victoria 3800, Australia

6. Canterbury Museum, Christchurch 8001, New Zealand

7. National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC 20013-7012, USA

Abstract

Living true seals (phocids) are the most widely dispersed semi-aquatic marine mammals, and comprise geographically separate northern (phocine) and southern (monachine) groups. Both are thought to have evolved in the North Atlantic, with only two monachine lineages—elephant seals and lobodontins—subsequently crossing the equator. The third and most basal monachine tribe, the monk seals, have hitherto been interpreted as exclusively northern and (sub)tropical throughout their entire history. Here, we describe a new species of extinct monk seal from the Pliocene of New Zealand, the first of its kind from the Southern Hemisphere, based on one of the best-preserved and richest samples of seal fossils worldwide. This unanticipated discovery reveals that all three monachine tribes once coexisted south of the equator, and forces a profound revision of their evolutionary history: rather than primarily diversifying in the North Atlantic, monachines largely evolved in the Southern Hemisphere, and from this southern cradle later reinvaded the north. Our results suggest that true seals crossed the equator over eight times in their history. Overall, they more than double the age of the north–south dichotomy characterizing living true seals and confirms a surprisingly recent major change in southern phocid diversity.

Funder

Robert Blackwood Partnership PhD Scholarship

Australian Government Research Training Program

Monash University Graduate Research Travel Grant

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

Reference63 articles.

1. The Origin and Evolutionary Biology of Pinnipeds: Seals, Sea Lions, and Walruses

2. Geography of phocid evolution;Ray CE;Syst. Biol.,1976

3. Phocid phylogeny and dispersal;de Muizon C;Ann. S. Afr. Mus.,1982

4. Chapter 3

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