Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-vdxz6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T02:37:52.215Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

First record of buccinid genus Chauvetia (Mollusca: Gastropoda) from the fossil record of the New World (Miocene, Venezuela) and its paleobiogeographic implications

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 October 2015

Bernard Landau
Affiliation:
Naturalis Biodiversity Center, P.O. Box 9517, NL-2300 RA Leiden, the Netherlands; Instituto Dom Luiz da Universidade de Lisboa, Campo Grande, 1749-016 Lisboa, Portugal and International Health Centres, Av. Infante de Henrique 7, Areias São João, P-8200-261 Albufeira, Portugal
Carlos M. da Silva
Affiliation:
Departamento de Geologia e Instituto Dom Luiz, Universidade de Lisboa, Campo Grande, 1749-016 Lisboa, Portugal
Geerat J. Vermeij
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, University of California at Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA

Abstract

Until now, the buccinid genus Chauvetia was considered of European or West African origin, and is still endemic to these areas today. This paper describes the oldest representative of the genus, Chauvetia inopinata nov. sp., from the upper Burdigalian-lower Langhian transition Cantaure Formation of Venezuela. This surprising record suggests a New World tropical origin to the genus and subsequent immigration to the Old World before the earliest known Old World record, which is upper Tortonian. We postulate that this pre-late Tortonian (pre-8.12–7.42 Ma) dispersal of the tropical Gatunian west-Atlantic Chauvetia into the tropical East Atlantic European-West African Province most probably happened during the 10.71–9.36 Ma interval (early–mid Tortonian) during which the Circum-Tropical Current weakened, and the northward Intra-Caribbean Current had started, enhancing the Gulf Stream and the North Atlantic Current. This new data constitutes compelling evidence of a pre-Pliocene eastward dispersal of New World shallow marine organisms across the Atlantic.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2015, The Paleontological Society 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aguilera, O.A., and Rodrígues de Aguilera, D., 1999, Anormalidades esqueléticas en peces fósiles del Mioceno temprano (Formación Cantaure) de Venezuela: Memória Fundación La Salle de Ciencias Naturales, v. 59, p. 4552.Google Scholar
Aguilera, O.A., Moraes-Santos, H., Costa, S., Ohe, F., Jaramillo, C., and Nogueira, A., 2013, Ariid sea catfishes from the coeval Pirabas (Northeastern Brazil), Cantaure, Castillo (Northwestern Venezuela), and Castilletes (North Colombia) formations (early Miocene), with description of three new species: Swiss Journal of Palaeontology, v. 132, p. 4568.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anderson, L.C., and Roopnarine, P.D., 2005, Role of constraint and selection in the morphologic evolution of Caryocorbula (Mollusca: Corbulidae) from the Caribbean Neogene: Paleontologia Electronica, Article 8.2.32A.Google Scholar
Ardovini, R., 2008, Description of a new species belonging to Genus Chauvetia Monterosato, 1884, (Gastropoda: Buccinidae), from West Africa (Senegal): Malacologia Mostra Mondiale, v. 60, p. 35.Google Scholar
Ávila, S., 2005, Processos e padrões de dispersão e de colonização nos Rissoiidae (Mollusca: Gastropoda) dos Açores. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Azores University, 329 p.Google Scholar
Blow, W.H., 1969, Late Middle Eocene to Recent Planktonic Foraminiferal Biostratigraphy: Proceedings of the First International Conference on Planktonic Microfossils, Geneva. 1967, 199 p.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boettger, O., 1902, Zur Kenntnis der Fauna der mittelmiocänen Schichten von Kostej im Krassó–Szörényer Komitat.Mit einem Situationsplan der Fundpunkte, 2: Verhandlungen und Mitteilungen des Siebenbürgischen Vereins für Naturwissenschaften zu Hermannstadt, v. 51, p. 1200.Google Scholar
Bolli, H.M., 1966, Zonation of Cretaceus to Pliocene marine sediments based on planktonic foraminifera: Asociación Venezolana de Geologia, Minera y Petroleo, Boletín Informativo, v. 9, p. 332.Google Scholar
Bouchet, P., 2013, Lachesis helenae E. A. Smith, 1890. Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species at http://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetailsandid=716287.Google Scholar
Bouchet, P., and Rocroi, J.P., 2005, Classification and nomenclator of gastropod families: Malacologia, v. 47, p. 1397.Google Scholar
Bucquoy, F., Dautzenberg, P., and Dollfus, G., 1883, Les mollusques marins du Rousillon, 1. Gastropodes, avec atlas de 66 planches photographées d’apres nature: Paris, J.B. Baillière and Dautzenberg, p. 85196.Google Scholar
Cachão, M., 1995, Utilização de nanofósseis calcários em biostratigrafia, paleoceanografia e paleoecologia. Aplicações ao Neogénico do Algarve (Portugal) e do Mediterrâneo Ocidental (ODP 653) e à problemática de Coccolithus pelagicus: PhD Thesis, University of Lisbon, 356 p.Google Scholar
Cachão, M., and da Silva, C.M., 2000, The three main marine depositional cycles of the Neogene of Portugal. Ciências da Terra (UNL): Lisboa, v. 14, p. 301310.Google Scholar
Casey, T.L., 1904, Notes on the Pleurotomidae with description of some new genera and species: Transactions of the Academy of Science of St. Louis, v. 14, p. 123170.Google Scholar
Chirli, C., 2000. Malacofauna Pliocenica Toscana. Vol. II. Superfamiglia Muricoidea: C. Chirli, Firenze, 142 p.Google Scholar
Coates, A.G., Jackson, J.B.C., Collins, L.S., Cronin, T.M., Dowsett, H.J., Bybell, L.M., Jung, P., and Obando, J.A., 1992, Closure of the Isthmus of Panama; the near–shore marine record of Costa Rica and western Panama: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 104, p. 814828.2.3.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coates, A.G., Aubry, M.P., Berggren, W.A., Collins, L.S., and Kunk, M., 2003, Early Neogene history of the Central American arc from Bocas del Toro, western Panama: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 115, p. 271287.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coates, A.G., Collins, L.S., Aubry, M.P., and Berggren, W.A., 2004, The geology of the Darien, Panama, and the late Miocene–Pliocene collision of the Panama arc with northwestern South America: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 116, p. 13271344.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coates, A.G., McNeill, D.F., Aubry, M.P., Berggren, W.A., and Collins, L.S., 2005, An introduction to the geology of the Bocas del Toro archipelago, Panama: Caribbean Journal of Science, v. 41, p. 374391.Google Scholar
Coates, A.G., and Obando, J.A., 1996, The geologic evolution of the Central American Isthmus, in Jackson, J.B.C., Budd, A.F., and Coates, A.G., eds., Evolution and environment in tropical America: Chicago, The University of Chicago Press, p. 2156.Google Scholar
Coates, A.G., and Stallard, B., 2013, How old is the Isthmus of Panama? Bulletins of Marine Science, v. 89, p. 801813.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collins, L.S., 2003, Micropaleontological evidence for the closure of the Central American Seaway: Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, v. 35, p. 85.Google Scholar
Collins, L.S., Budd, A.F., and Coates, A.G., 1996a, Earliest evolution associated with closure of the Tropical American Seaway: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, v. 93, p. 60696072.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Collins, L.S., Coates, A.G., Berggren, W.A., Aubry, M.–P., and Zhang, J., 1996b, The late Miocene Panama isthmian strait: Geology, v. 24, p. 687690.2.3.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coovert, G.A., and Coovert, H.K., 1995, Revision of the supraspecific classification of marginelliform gastropods: The Nautilus, v. 109, p. 43110.Google Scholar
Cronin, T.M., and Dowsett, H.J., 1996, Biotic and oceanographic response to the Pliocene closing of the Central American Isthmus, in Jackson, J.B.C, Budd, A.F., and Coates, A.G., eds., Evolution and Environment in Tropical America: Chicago, The University of Chicago Press, p. 76104.Google Scholar
Díaz de Gamero, M.L., 1974, Microfauna y edad de la Formación Cantaure, Península de Paraguaná, Venezuela: Asociacion Venezolana de Geologia, Minera y Petroleo, Boletín Informativo, v. 13, p. 4147.Google Scholar
Farris, D., Jaramillo, C., Bayona, G., Restrepo-Moreno, S.A., Montes, C., Cardona, A., Mora, A., Speakman, R., Glascock, M., and Valencia, V., 2011, Fracturing of the Panamanian Ithmus during initial collision: Geology, v. 39, p. 10071010.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gibson-Smith, J., and Gibson-Smith, W., 1974, The Genus Strombina in Venezuela, with description of a new Recent and some fossil species: Asociacion Venezolana de Geologia, Minera y Petroleo, Boletín Informativo, v. 17, p. 4985.Google Scholar
Gofas, S., and Oliver, J.D., 2010, Las especies del género Chauvetia (Gastropoda, Neogastropoda, Buccinidae) del área ibero–marroquí, con descripción de cuatro especies nuevas: Iberus, v. 28, p. 2360.Google Scholar
Gradstein, F.M., Ogg, J.G., Schmitz, M.D., and Ogg, G.M., 2012, The Geologic Time Scale 2012: Amsterdam, Elsevier, v. 2, p. 4371144.Google Scholar
Graham, A., 1988, Molluscs: Prosobranch and pyramidellid gastropods. Synopses of the British Fauna (new series), in Kermack, D.M., and Barnes, R.S.K., eds., second edition, published for The Linnaean Society of London and The Estuarine and Brackish-Water Sciences Association, Leiden, E.J. Brill/Dr. W. Backhuys, 662 p.Google Scholar
Griffiths, N., Müller, W., Johnson, K.G., and Aguilera, O.A., 2013, Evaluation of the effect of diagenetic cements on element/Ca ratios in aragonitic Early Miocene (~16 Ma) Caribbean corals: implications for ‘deep-time’ palaeoenvironmental reconstructions: Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, v. 369, p. 185200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hedley, C., 1922, A revision of the Australian Turridae: Records of the Australian Museum, v. 13, p. 213359.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hergueta, E., Luque, A.A., and Templado, J., 2002, On the taxonomy and biology of Chauvetia mamillata in South East Spain: Bollettino Malacologico, v. 38(suppl. 4), p. 135146.Google Scholar
Hunter, V.F., and Bartok, P., 1974, The age and correlation of the Tertiary sediments of the Paraguaná Península, Venezuela: Asociacion Venezolana de Geologia, Minera y Petroleo, Boletín Informativo, v. 17, p. 143154.Google Scholar
Jackson, J.B.C., and O’Dea, A., 2013, Timing of the oceanographic and biological isolation of the Caribbean Sea from the tropical Eastern Pacific Ocean: Bulletin of Marine Science, v. 89, p. 779800.Google Scholar
Jung, P., 1965, Miocene Mollusca from the Paraguana Peninsula, Venezuela: Bulletins of American Paleontology, v. 49(223), p. 387644.Google Scholar
Kameo, K., and Sato, T., 2000, Biogeography of Neogene calcareous nannofossils in the Caribbean and the eastern equatorial Pacific–floral response to the emergence of the Isthmus of Panama: Marine Micropaleontology, v. 39, p. 201218.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knudsen, J., 1956, Marine prosobranchs of Tropical West Africa (Stenoglossa): Atlantide Report, v. 4, p. 8110.Google Scholar
Landau, B.M., and Petit, R.E., 1996, New species of Cancellaroidea (Mollusca: Gastropoda) from the Lower Miocene Cantaure Formation of Venezuela: Tulane Studies in Geology, v. 29, p. 145150.Google Scholar
Landau, B.M., and da Silva, C.M., 2006, The early Pliocene Gastropoda (Mollusca) of Estepona, southern Spain, part 9, Olividae: Paleontos, v. 9, p. 121.Google Scholar
Landau, B.M., and da Silva, C.M., 2010, Early Pliocene gastropods of Cubagua, Venezuela: taxonomy, palaeobiogeography and ecostratigraphy: Palaeontos, v. 19, p. 1221.Google Scholar
Landau, B.M., Beu, A., and Marquet, R., 2004, The early Pliocene Gastropoda (Mollusca) of Estepona, southern Spain, part 5, Tonnoidea, Ficoidea: Palaeontos, v. 5, p. 35102.Google Scholar
Landau, B.M., Petit, R.E., and da Silva, C.M., 2007, The Pliocene Cancellariidae (Mollusca: Gastropoda) of the Cubagua Formation (Cerro Negro Member) from Cubagua Island, with a new species from the Miocene Cantaure Formation, Venezuela: The Veliger, v. 49, p. 2743.Google Scholar
Landau, B.M., da Silva, C.M., and Gili, C., 2009, The early Pliocene Gastropoda (Mollusca) of Estepona, southern Spain, part 8, Nassariidae: Palaeontos, v. 17, p. 35102.Google Scholar
Landau, B., da Silva, C.M., and Mayoral, E., 2011, The Lower Pliocene gastropods of the Huelva Sands Formation, Guadalquivir Basin, Southwestern Spain: Palaeofocus, v. 4, p. 190.Google Scholar
Leigh, E.G., O’Dea, A., and Vermeij, G.J., 2014, Historical biogeography of the Ithmus of Panama: Biological Reviews, v. 89, p. 148172.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Léxico Estratigráfico de Venezuela (L.E.V.). 1997, Léxico estratigráfico de Venezuela. Ministerio de Energía y Minas. Tercera edición: Boletín Geológico, v. 12, p. 1828.Google Scholar
Martini, E., 1971, Standard tertiary and quaternary calcareous Nannoplankton Zonation, in Farancini, A., ed., Proceedings of the II Planktonic Conference, Rome, 1970, Ed. Tecnosci., v. 2, p. 739–785.Google Scholar
Micali, P., 1999, Note sulle specie di Chauvetia dell’Atlantico nord-orientale: Bollettino Malacologico, v. 34, p. 5368.Google Scholar
Molnar, P., 2008, Closing of the Central American Seaway and the Ice Age: a critical review: Paleoceanography, v. 23, p. PA2201.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Monterosato, T.A., di 1884, Nomenclatura generica e specifica di alcune conchiglie mediterranee: Palermo, Virzi, 152. p.Google Scholar
Monterosato, T.A., di 1889, Coquilles marines Marocaines: Journal de Conchyliologie, v. 37, p. 2040, p. 112–121.Google Scholar
Montes, C., Cardona, A., McFadden, R., Morón, S. E., Silva, C., Restrepo-Moreno, S., Ramírez, D., Hoyos, N., Wilson, J., Farris, D., Bayona, G., Jaramillo, C., Valencia, V., Bryan, J., and Flores, J., 2012, Evidence for middle Eocene and younger land emergence in central Panama: implications for Isthmus closure: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 124, p. 780799.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nehm, R., 2001, Calibrating spatial and temporal species richness patterns in tropical American marginellid gastropods: Journal of Paleontology, v. 75, p. 680696.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nieulande, F.A.D. van., 1981, Descriptions of Eocene Marginellidae (Mollusca, Gastropoda) from the Paris Basin: Mededelingen van de Werkgroep voor Tertiare en Kwartaire Geologie, v. 18, p. 3983.Google Scholar
Nolf, D., and Aguilera, O., 1998, Fish otoliths from the Cantaure Formation (Early Miocene of Venezuela): Bulletin de l’Institut Royal des Science Naturelles de Belgique, Sciences de la Terre, v. 68, p. 237262.Google Scholar
Nordsieck, F., and Garcia-Talavera, F., 1979, Moluscos marinos de Canarias y Madera (Gastropoda): Aula de Cultura de Tenerife, 208 p.Google Scholar
Okada, H., and Bukry, D., 1980, Supplementary modification and introduction of code numbers to the low-latitude coccolith biostratigraphic zonation: Marine Micropaleontology, v. 5, p. 321325.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oliver, J.D., and Rolán, E., 2008, Las especies del género Chauvetia (Gastropoda, Neogastropoda) del área de Dakar, Senegal, África occidental, con la descripción de diez especies nuevas: Iberus, v. 26, p. 133175.Google Scholar
Oliver, J.D., and Rolán, E., 2009, Las especies de Chauvetia Monterosato, 1884 (Mollusca, Neogastropoda) de Canarias y el área oeste africana de Mauritania y Sahara: Iberus, v. 27, p. 113154.Google Scholar
Penchaszadeh, P.E., and Rincon, A., 1996, Egg capsules and development of Prunum prunum (Gmelin, 1791) (Prosobranchia: Marginellidae) from the Venezuelan Caribbean: The Veliger, v. 39, p. 8386.Google Scholar
Raffi, S., Stanley, S., and Marasti, R., 1985, Biogeographic patterns and Plio-Pleistocene extinction of Bivalvia in the Mediterranean and southern North Sea: Paleobiology, v. 11, p. 368388.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rey, O.T., 1996, Estratigrafía de la Península de Paraguaná, Venezuela: Revista de la Facultad Ingeniería de Venezuela, v. 11, p. 3545.Google Scholar
Risso, A., 1826, Histoire naturelle des principales productions de l’Europe méridionale et principalement de celles des environs de Nice et des Alpes-Maritimes, 4, Mollusques: Paris, Levrault, p. ivii, 1–439.Google Scholar
Rolán, E., 1983, Moluscos de la Ria de Vigo, I Gasterópodos: Thalassas, v. 1, p. 1383.Google Scholar
Rolán, E., 2005, Malacological fauna from the Cape Verde Archipelago, part 1, Polyplacophora and Gastropoda: Hackenheim, ConchBooks, 455. p.Google Scholar
Silva, C.M. da, 2001, Gastrópodes pliocénicos marinhos de Portugal: sistemática, paleoecologia, paleobiologia, paleogeografia, Dissertação de doutoramento, Faculdade de Ciências da Universidade de Lisboa, Lisboa, 747 p.Google Scholar
Silva, C.M. da, Landau, B.M., and La Perna, R., 2011, Biogeography of Iberian Atlantic Neogene marginelliform gastropods (Marginellidae, Cystiscidae): global change and transatlantic colonization: Journal of Paleontology, v. 85, p. 10521066.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, E.A., 1890, Report on the marine molluscan fauna of the island of St. Helena: Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 1890, p. 247317.Google Scholar
Vermeij, G.J., and Rosenberg, G., 1993, Giving and receiving: the tropical Atlantic as a donor and recipient region for invading species: American Malacological Bulletin, v. 10, p. 181194.Google Scholar
Wirtz, P., 2011, New records of marine invertebrates from the coast of Senegal, Arquipelago: Life and Marine Sciences, v. 28, p. 79.Google Scholar
Zilch, A., 1934, Zur Fauna des Mittel–Miocäns von Kostej (Banat). Typus–Bestimmung und Tafeln zu O: Boettger’s Bearbeitungen, Senkenbergiana, v. 16, p. 193302.Google Scholar