Title
Paleogene equatorial penguins challenge the proposed relationship between biogeography, diversity, and Cenozoic climate change
Date Issued
10 July 2007
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Clarke J.A.
Ksepka D.T.
Stucchi M.
Giannini N.
Bertelli S.
Narváez Y.
Boyd C.A.
Abstract
New penguin fossils from the Eocene of Peru force a reevaluation of previous hypotheses regarding the causal role of climate change in penguin evolution. Repeatedly it has been proposed that penguins originated in high southern latitudes and arrived at equatorial regions relatively recently (e.g., 4-8 million years ago), well after the onset of latest Eocene/Oligocene global cooling and increases in polar ice volume. By contrast, new discoveries from the middle and late Eocene of Peru reveal that penguins invaded low latitudes >30 million years earlier than prior data suggested, during one of the warmest intervals of the Cenozoic. A diverse fauna includes two new species, here reported from two of the best exemplars of Paleogene penguins yet recovered. The most comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of Sphenisciformes to date, combining morphological and molecular data, places the new species outside the extant penguin radiation (crown clade: Spheniscidae) and supports two separate dispersals to equatorial (paleolatitude ≈14°S) regions during greenhouse earth conditions. One new species, Perudyptes devriesi, is among the deepest divergences within Sphenisciformes. The second, Icadyptes salasi, is the most complete giant (>1.5 m standing height) penguin yet described. Both species provide critical information on early penguin cranial osteology, trends in penguin body size, and the evolution of the penguin flipper. © 2007 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA.
Start page
11545
End page
11550
Volume
104
Issue
28
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Paleontología
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-34547400432
PubMed ID
Resource of which it is part
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
ISSN of the container
00278424
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus