Abstract

BackgroundWas there a mid-Cenozoic vertebrate extinction and recovery event in Madagascar and, if so, what are its implications for the evolution of lemurs? The near lack of an early and mid-Cenozoic fossil record on Madagascar has inhibited direct testing of any such hypotheses. We compare the terrestrial vertebrate fauna of Madagascar in the Holocene to that of early Cenozoic continental Africa to shed light on the probability of a major mid-Cenozoic lemur extinction event, followed by an “adaptive radiation” or recovery. We also use multiple analytic approaches to test competing models of lemur diversification and the null hypothesis that no unusual mid-Cenozoic extinction of lemurs occurred.ResultsComparisons of the terrestrial vertebrate faunas of the early Cenozoic on continental Africa and Holocene on Madagascar support the inference that Madagascar suffered a major mid-Cenozoic extinction event. Evolutionary modeling offers some corroboration, although the level of support varies by phylogeny and model used. Using the lemur phylogeny and divergence dates generated by Kistler and colleagues, RPANDA and TESS offer moderate support for the occurrence of unusual extinction at or near the Eocene-Oligocene (E-O) boundary (34 Ma). TreePar, operating under the condition of obligate mass extinction, found peak diversification at 31 Ma, and low probability of survival of prior lineages. Extinction at the E-O boundary received greater support than other candidate extinctions or the null hypothesis of no major extinction. Using the lemur phylogeny and divergence dates generated by Herrera & Dàvalos, evidence for large-scale extinction diminishes and its most likely timing shifts to before 40 Ma, which fails to conform to global expectations.ConclusionsWhile support for large-scale mid-Cenozoic lemur extinction on Madagascar based on phylogenetic modeling is inconclusive, the African fossil record does provide indirect support. Furthermore, a major extinction and recovery of lemuriforms during the Eocene-Oligocene transition (EOT) would coincide with other major vertebrate extinctions in North America, Europe, and Africa. It would suggest that Madagascar’s lemurs were impacted by the climate shift from “greenhouse” to “ice-house” conditions that occurred at that time. This could, in turn, help to explain some of the peculiar characteristics of the lemuriform clade.

Highlights

  • Was there a mid-Cenozoic vertebrate extinction and recovery event in Madagascar and, if so, what are its implications for the evolution of lemurs? The near lack of an early and mid-Cenozoic fossil record on Madagascar has inhibited direct testing of any such hypotheses

  • The Myzopodidae and Nycteridae have molecular divergence times within the Paleogene [47]; other bats known to have existed in Africa prior to the Oligocene may have arrived on Madagascar earlier, but none of the living members of these families appears to derive from colonizations during the Paleocene or Eocene

  • We suggest that at 31 Million years ago (Ma), the ancestral lemuriform had evolved a number of traits that can be understood as adaptations to the global cooling, forest reduction, and forest fragmentation that occurred during the Eocene-Oligocene transition (EOT)

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Summary

Introduction

Was there a mid-Cenozoic vertebrate extinction and recovery event in Madagascar and, if so, what are its implications for the evolution of lemurs? The near lack of an early and mid-Cenozoic fossil record on Madagascar has inhibited direct testing of any such hypotheses. The first [1] is predicated on the assumption that lemurs were present on Madagascar ~ 50 million years ago when Chiromyiformes (Daubentoniidae) and Lemuriformes diverged [4] It maintains that there was a major extinction followed by an explosive radiation of lemurs in the middle of the Cenozoic. Diversification rates increased gradually through time likely due to increasing resource competition, ecological specialization, geographic isolation and/or habitat fragmentation. This second hypothesis implies that lemurs escaped the large-scale faunal extinctions that occurred globally during the midCenozoic, or that such an extinction event did not occur on Madagascar

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