6533b7d0fe1ef96bd1259b9a

RESEARCH PRODUCT

TAXONOMY AND AFFINITIES OF AFRICAN CENOZOIC METATHERIANS

Francisco J. GoinVicente D. Crespo

subject

PeratheriumbiologyHerpetotheriidaePaleontologybiology.organism_classificationAffinitiesQE701-760TheriaPaleontologyTaxonGeographyBiological dispersalTaxonomy (biology)mammalia metatheria africa cenozoic biogeographyCenozoic

description

The record of extinct African metatherians (Mammalia, Theria) is scanty, restricted in time (Eocene–Miocene), and its taxonomy is still subject of debate. A review of all African metatherians, or alleged metatherians, known up to now, led us to the recognition of only three taxa referable to this group: (1)  Kasserinotherium tunisiense  (Peradectoidea?), from the early Eocene of Tunisia; (2)  Peratherium africanum  (Herpetotheriidae), from the early Oligocene of Egypt and Oman, and (3) an indeterminate Herpetotheriidae? from the early Miocene of Uganda. Herpetotheriids probably reached Afro-Arabia from Europe in one or more dispersal waves since the early Oligocene.  Kasserinotherium , on the contrary, suggests an earlier (Paleocene) arrival from South America, judging from its alleged affinities with South American and Australian taxa. Such a migration event (probably, through a filter corridor such as the Rio Grande Rise-Walvis Ridge system in the South Atlantic) may also explain the enigmatic presence of polydolopimorphian metatherians in the Cenozoic of central Anatolia (Turkey). A more radical hypothesis is that all European (Eurasian?) Marsupialiformes have an ultimate origin in South America, from where they dispersed via Africa by the Paleocene–earliest Eocene.

10.7203/sjp.36.2.20974https://ojs.uv.es/index.php/sjpalaeontology/article/view/20974