University of Florida
paleontologists(古生物学者) have discovered
remarkably1 well-preserved fossils of two
crocodilians(鳄目动物) and a mammal
previously2 unknown to science during recent Panama Canal
excavations4 that began in 2009. The two new ancient extinct
alligator5-like animals and an extinct hippo-like species inhabited Central America during the Miocene about 20 million years ago. The research expands the range of ancient animals in the subtropics -- some of the most diverse areas today about which little is known historically because lush vegetation prevents paleontological excavations -- and may be used to better understand how climate change affects species dispersal today. The two studies appear online today in the same issue of the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.
The fossils shed new light on scientists' understanding of species distribution because they represent a time before the formation of the
Isthmus6 of Panama, when the continents of North and South America were separated by oceanic waters.
"In part we are trying to understand how
ecosystems8 have responded to animals moving long distances and across
geographic9 barriers in the past," said study co-author Jonathan Bloch, associate curator of vertebrate paleontology at the Florida Museum of Natural History on the UF campus. "It's a testing ground for things like invasive species -- if you have things that migrated from one place into another in the past, then potentially you have the ability to look at what impact a new species might have on an
ecosystem7 in the future."
The research was funded by the National Science Foundation Panama Canal
Partnerships10 in International Research and Education project, which supports paleontological
excavation3 of the canal during construction expected to continue through 2014.
"We're very fortunate we could get the funding for PIRE to take advantage of this opportunity -- we're getting to sample these areas that are completely unsampled," said Alex Hastings, lead author of the crocodilian study and a visiting
instructor11 at Georgia Southern University who conducted the research for the project as a UF graduate student.
Researchers
analyzed12 all known crocodilian fossils from the Panama Canal, including the oldest records of Central American caimans, which are cousins of
alligators13. The more
primitive14 species, named Culebrasuchus mesoamericanus, may represent an
evolutionary15 transition between caimans and alligators, Hastings said.
"You mix an alligator and one of the more primitive caimans and you end up with this caiman that has a much flatter
snout(鼻子), making it more like an alligator," Hastings said. "Before this, there were no fossil crocodilian
skulls16 known from Central America."