Eocene shallow-marine ostracods from Madagascar: southern end of the Tethys?

Moriaki Yasuhara*, Yuanyuan Hong, Skye Yunshu Tian, Wing Ki Chong, Hisayo Okahashi, Kate Littler, Laura Cotton

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

14 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Twenty-five genera and 32 species of Eocene shallow-marine ostracods from Madagascar were examined for taxonomy and palaeobiogeography. Eight new species – Paijenborchellina madagascarensis sp. nov., Neocyprideis polygonoreticulata sp. nov., Alciella irizukii sp. nov., Neomonoceratina afroangulosa sp. nov., Muellerina eocenica sp. nov., Stigmatobradleya hunti gen. et sp. nov., Uroleberis paranuda sp. nov., Xestoleberis renemai sp. nov. – and one new genus – Stigmatobradleya gen. nov. – are described. Eocene Malagasy ostracods showed a strong affinity to the Eocene East Tethyan fauna in Arab-Africa and Indo-Pakistan. They also showed certain affinity to the Eocene West Tethyan fauna in Europe. One species, Pokornyella lamarckiana sensu lato, showed a very wide Eocene geographical distribution, covering Europe, Indo-Pakistan, Arab-Africa, Japan and perhaps North America. These results indicate that the East African, Arabian, and Indo-Pakistan regions constitute the East Tethyan palaeobiogeographical sub-realm, with considerable faunal similarity found across the regions. This sub-realm extends to south-eastern Africa in the south and is a part of the broader Tethyan palaeobiogeographical realm with certain, but less, palaeobiogeographical similarity. The spatial extent of the Tethys palaobiogeographical realm sensu lato includes Asia-Oceania in the east and eastern America in the west. Based on our results, we suggest a need to update the scheme of global ostracod biogeographical division. http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C98E65A2-FEB8-4D63-B294-7A1A22C51F5E.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)705-757
Number of pages53
JournalJournal of Systematic Palaeontology
Volume17
Issue number9
Early online date4 May 2018
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 3 May 2019

Keywords

  • Africa
  • Cenozoic
  • Crustacea
  • global palaeobiogeography
  • Ostracoda
  • Palaeogene

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