Abstract

Maximum period of existence of endemic genera in the temperately warm-water (subtropical) and temperately cold-water (low boreal and subantarctic) faunal belts is revealed on the base of latest data on the composition of brachiopod fauna of recent seas and oceans and most full data on the paleontological finds of recent brachiopod genera. Most of the subtropical endemics inhabit southern hemisphere; one of them is Bouchardia, which is known beginning with the Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian), that brings together southern subtropical faunal belt with the tropical zone and suggests that subtropical waters could serve as a refuge for representatives of ancient warm-water faunas during large geological and hydrological reconstructions at the Mesozoic-Cenozoic boundary. Most of the younger endemics of low boreal and subantarctic faunal belts appeared at the Paleogene-Neogene boundary, during the period of formation of modern contrast climate on the Earth that was caused by the formation of Antarctic Circumpolar Current. The appearance of recent species and genera in the Holocene was influenced by last considerable postglacial reconstruction of climate.

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