A Miocene hyperdiverse crocodylian community reveals peculiar trophic dynamics in proto-Amazonian mega-wetlands

Author:

Salas-Gismondi Rodolfo12,Flynn John J.3,Baby Patrice45,Tejada-Lara Julia V.26,Wesselingh Frank P.7,Antoine Pierre-Olivier1

Affiliation:

1. Institut des Sciences de l’Évolution, Université de Montpellier, CNRS, IRD EPHE, Montpellier 34095, France

2. Departamento de Paleontología de Vertebrados, Museo de Historia Natural, Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, Avenida Arenales 1256, Lima 14, Peru

3. Division of Paleontology, American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY 10024-5192, USA

4. Géosciences-Environnements Toulouse, Université de Toulouse, UPS (SVT-OMP), CNRS, IRD, 14 Avenue Édouard Belin, Toulouse 31400, France

5. Convenio IRD-PeruPetro, Avenida Luis Aldana 320, San Borja, Lima, Peru

6. Florida Museum of Natural History and Department of Biology, University of Florida, PO BOX 117800, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA

7. Naturalis Biodiversity Center, P.O. Box 9517, 2300 RA, Leiden, The Netherlands

Abstract

Amazonia contains one of the world's richest biotas, but origins of this diversity remain obscure. Onset of the Amazon River drainage at approximately 10.5 Ma represented a major shift in Neotropical ecosystems, and proto-Amazonian biotas just prior to this pivotal episode are integral to understanding origins of Amazonian biodiversity, yet vertebrate fossil evidence is extraordinarily rare. Two new species-rich bonebeds from late Middle Miocene proto-Amazonian deposits of northeastern Peru document the same hyperdiverse assemblage of seven co-occurring crocodylian species. Besides the large-bodied Purussaurus and Mourasuchus , all other crocodylians are new taxa, including a stem caiman— Gnatusuchus pebasensis —bearing a massive shovel-shaped mandible, procumbent anterior and globular posterior teeth, and a mammal-like diastema. This unusual species is an extreme exemplar of a radiation of small caimans with crushing dentitions recording peculiar feeding strategies correlated with a peak in proto-Amazonian molluscan diversity and abundance. These faunas evolved within dysoxic marshes and swamps of the long-lived Pebas Mega-Wetland System and declined with inception of the transcontinental Amazon drainage, favouring diversification of longirostrine crocodylians and more modern generalist-feeding caimans. The rise and demise of distinctive, highly productive aquatic ecosystems substantially influenced evolution of Amazonian biodiversity hotspots of crocodylians and other organisms throughout the Neogene.

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

Reference44 articles.

1. Amazonia Through Time: Andean Uplift, Climate Change, Landscape Evolution, and Biodiversity

2. Lake Pebas: a palaeoecological reconstruction of a Miocene, long-lived lake complex in western Amazonia;Wesselingh FP;Cainoz. Res.,2002

3. The stratigraphy and regional structure of Miocene deposits in western Amazonia (Peru, Colombia and Brazil), with implications for late Neogene landscape evolution;Wesselingh FP;Scr. Geol.,2006

4. Marine incursions and the influence of Andean tectonics on the Miocene depositional history of northwestern Amazonia: results of a palynostratigraphic study

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