Publicación
Artículo científico (article).
Cenogram analyses as habitat indicators for paleogene–neogene mammalian communities across the globe, with an emphasis on the early eocene Cambay Shale mammalian community from India
El análisis de cenogramas como indicador del habitat en comunidades de mamíferos del paleogeno-neogeno a nivel global, con especial énfasis en la comunidad de mamíferos del eoceno de Cambay Shale, India
Docta Complutense
oai:docta.ucm.es:20.500.14352/97213
Docta Complutense
- Kapur, Vivesh V.
- García Yelo, Blanca Ana
- Morthekai, P
The present study is an attempt to utilize cenogram methodology (both qualitative and quantitative) to consider mammalian communities from fve early to late Eocene localities across the globe (i.e., Polecat Bench, Bighorn Basin, North America; Abbey Wood, Blackheath Formation, UK; Cambay Shale, Cambay Basin, India; Wutu Formation, Wutu Basin, China; Pondaung Formation, Myanmar) so as to provide a comparative palaeohabitat framework. It is also a frst attempt to examine the palaeohabitat of an extinct mammalian community (i.e., from Cambay Shale) in India utilizing the cenogram approach. In addition, seven extinct middle-Miocene communities (Laogou, Linxia Basin, China; Estación Imperial, Spain; Paseo de las Acacias, Spain; Arroyo del Olivar-Puente de Vallecas, Spain; Somo-saguas, Spain; Paracuellos 5, Spain; Paracuellos 3, Spain) have also been considered, in order to provide a global perspective to the climatic inferences in a temporal context. The majority of statistical calculations for Paleogene communities expose forested and humid conditions, excluding the Cambay Shale mammalian community of India. A hidden diversity within the medium to large body-size category of mammals (disguising the mammal biodiversity expected in tropical forested habitats) from Cambay Shale (western India) is a plausible cause of digression in the results. This is refected in the histograms showing relationships between proportions of mammal species in various body-mass categories. Furthermore, the results show that Neogene mammalian communities were sustained in comparatively open habitats. Diferences between occidental European and Asian localities in the canopy and humidity of the Neogene environments are also refected in our analyses.
DOI: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/97213
Docta Complutense
oai:docta.ucm.es:20.500.14352/97213
HANDLE: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/97213
Docta Complutense
oai:docta.ucm.es:20.500.14352/97213
Ver en: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/97213
Docta Complutense
oai:docta.ucm.es:20.500.14352/97213