Abstract

The avian fossil record of southern Brazil is scarce, consisting of few isolated remains. Here is described a ciconiid fossil from the assemblage of mammalian remains of the Santa Vitoria Formation (SVF). The specimen is a cervical vertebra morphologically similar to Ciconia maguari (maguari stork), common in southern Brazil today. Nevertheless, its larger dimensions suggest that it could be either a morphotype of that species or another, extinct species. The taphonomic modifications of the vertebra result of a combination of autogenic and allogenic factors including the aquatic habit, shape and transportation by flowing water and burial in a shallow stream. The fossil-bearing sediment dated by luminescence was deposited during the late Pleistocene, at 37.9 ka b2k, and exhibits physical features indicating deposition under variable discharge and seasonal oscillations of the water table. The presence of an aquatic bird in these sediments indicates a period of increased precipitation, chronocorrelated to one of the millenial-scale warming pulses recorded in ice cores from Antarctica (Antarctic Isotope Maxima) that characterized the interstadial MIS 3. On the other hand, the dry and cold climate of the following glacial MIS 2 may have forced ciconiids and aquatic mammals to retreat to suitable areas (refugia), as indicated by their absence in the loess deposits (Cordao Formation) overlying the SVF, until returning during the Holocene when climate became wet and warm again. The results presented here increase the avian fossil record of southern Brazil and help understand the role of climate change on the distribution of ciconiid birds and other taxa during the Quaternary in southern South America.

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