The spread of existing diurnal squirrels across the Bering and Panamanian land bridges. American Museum novitates

26 p. : maps 24 cm. Includes bibliographical references (p. 24-26). "There are four living phyla of diurnal squirrels with taxa on opposite sides of Bering Strait which are differentiated to a degree that is recognized to be of less than generic rank. For each of these four phyla the greatest r...

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Main Author: Moore, Joseph Curtis.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: New York, N.Y. : American Museum of Natural History 1961
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2246/3483
id ftamnh:oai:digitallibrary.amnh.org:2246/3483
record_format openpolar
spelling ftamnh:oai:digitallibrary.amnh.org:2246/3483 2023-05-15T15:42:38+02:00 The spread of existing diurnal squirrels across the Bering and Panamanian land bridges. American Museum novitates no. 2044 Spread of squirrels Moore, Joseph Curtis. 1961 3380284 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2246/3483 eng en_US eng New York, N.Y. : American Museum of Natural History American Museum novitates no. 2044 http://hdl.handle.net/2246/3483 QL1 .A436 no.2044 1961 Squirrels -- Geographical distribution -- America Squirrels -- Dispersal -- America Squirrels Fossil -- Bering Land Bridge Fossil -- Panama -- Panama Isthmus of Paleontology -- Pliocene -- Bering Land Bridge Paleontology -- Pliocene -- Panama -- Panama Paleontology -- Pleistocene -- America Paleontology -- Bering Land Bridge Paleontology -- Panama -- Panama Mammals text 1961 ftamnh 2022-03-24T06:33:07Z 26 p. : maps 24 cm. Includes bibliographical references (p. 24-26). "There are four living phyla of diurnal squirrels with taxa on opposite sides of Bering Strait which are differentiated to a degree that is recognized to be of less than generic rank. For each of these four phyla the greatest range of a single species occupies the principal continuous land mass west of the Strait. Also, for each phylum a greater number of species occurs on the east than on the west. It is suggested that, other things being equal, a species that occupies the large Palearctic range is the dominant species in its phylum, and, when ecological conditions are suitable for a spread across the Bering land bridge, it would be the dominant species that would spread. Some of the more numerous Nearctic species are considered to have evolved from the populations that spread from west to east and then to have become geographically isolated. The Palearctic Region is regarded therefore as the center of dispersal for these diurnal squirrel phyla: the subtribes Sciurina, Tamiina, Spermophilina, and Marmotina. The probable place of origin is shown to be the Nearctic Region for the Tamiina, the Spermophilina, and the Marmotina. The large, relatively unbroken area of the northern Palearctic Region is, and may for a long time have been, the largest area available in the world as a range for a single species of terrestrial vertebrates, and the possibility is noted that it may be the area on which the dominant species are evolved in vertebrate phyla other than diurnal squirrels. If such is the case, the above-described mechanism may be conceded to have contributed importantly to the predominantly eastward spreading across the Bering land bridge recognized by Simpson (1947) and Darlington (1957). Central America, or parts of it, as an island or archipelago must have served as a staging area for the adaptation of squirrel species of Nearctic origin to tropical conditions over perhaps a substantial portion of the Pliocene before the emergence of a Panamanian land bridge gave them access to South America at the end of the Pliocene"--P. 23-24. Text Bering Land Bridge Bering Strait American Museum of Natural History: AMNH scientific publications Bering Strait Darlington ENVELOPE(-60.750,-60.750,-72.000,-72.000)
institution Open Polar
collection American Museum of Natural History: AMNH scientific publications
op_collection_id ftamnh
language English
topic QL1 .A436 no.2044
1961
Squirrels -- Geographical distribution -- America
Squirrels -- Dispersal -- America
Squirrels
Fossil -- Bering Land Bridge
Fossil -- Panama -- Panama
Isthmus of
Paleontology -- Pliocene -- Bering Land Bridge
Paleontology -- Pliocene -- Panama -- Panama
Paleontology -- Pleistocene -- America
Paleontology -- Bering Land Bridge
Paleontology -- Panama -- Panama
Mammals
spellingShingle QL1 .A436 no.2044
1961
Squirrels -- Geographical distribution -- America
Squirrels -- Dispersal -- America
Squirrels
Fossil -- Bering Land Bridge
Fossil -- Panama -- Panama
Isthmus of
Paleontology -- Pliocene -- Bering Land Bridge
Paleontology -- Pliocene -- Panama -- Panama
Paleontology -- Pleistocene -- America
Paleontology -- Bering Land Bridge
Paleontology -- Panama -- Panama
Mammals
Moore, Joseph Curtis.
The spread of existing diurnal squirrels across the Bering and Panamanian land bridges. American Museum novitates
topic_facet QL1 .A436 no.2044
1961
Squirrels -- Geographical distribution -- America
Squirrels -- Dispersal -- America
Squirrels
Fossil -- Bering Land Bridge
Fossil -- Panama -- Panama
Isthmus of
Paleontology -- Pliocene -- Bering Land Bridge
Paleontology -- Pliocene -- Panama -- Panama
Paleontology -- Pleistocene -- America
Paleontology -- Bering Land Bridge
Paleontology -- Panama -- Panama
Mammals
description 26 p. : maps 24 cm. Includes bibliographical references (p. 24-26). "There are four living phyla of diurnal squirrels with taxa on opposite sides of Bering Strait which are differentiated to a degree that is recognized to be of less than generic rank. For each of these four phyla the greatest range of a single species occupies the principal continuous land mass west of the Strait. Also, for each phylum a greater number of species occurs on the east than on the west. It is suggested that, other things being equal, a species that occupies the large Palearctic range is the dominant species in its phylum, and, when ecological conditions are suitable for a spread across the Bering land bridge, it would be the dominant species that would spread. Some of the more numerous Nearctic species are considered to have evolved from the populations that spread from west to east and then to have become geographically isolated. The Palearctic Region is regarded therefore as the center of dispersal for these diurnal squirrel phyla: the subtribes Sciurina, Tamiina, Spermophilina, and Marmotina. The probable place of origin is shown to be the Nearctic Region for the Tamiina, the Spermophilina, and the Marmotina. The large, relatively unbroken area of the northern Palearctic Region is, and may for a long time have been, the largest area available in the world as a range for a single species of terrestrial vertebrates, and the possibility is noted that it may be the area on which the dominant species are evolved in vertebrate phyla other than diurnal squirrels. If such is the case, the above-described mechanism may be conceded to have contributed importantly to the predominantly eastward spreading across the Bering land bridge recognized by Simpson (1947) and Darlington (1957). Central America, or parts of it, as an island or archipelago must have served as a staging area for the adaptation of squirrel species of Nearctic origin to tropical conditions over perhaps a substantial portion of the Pliocene before the emergence of a Panamanian land bridge gave them access to South America at the end of the Pliocene"--P. 23-24.
format Text
author Moore, Joseph Curtis.
author_facet Moore, Joseph Curtis.
author_sort Moore, Joseph Curtis.
title The spread of existing diurnal squirrels across the Bering and Panamanian land bridges. American Museum novitates
title_short The spread of existing diurnal squirrels across the Bering and Panamanian land bridges. American Museum novitates
title_full The spread of existing diurnal squirrels across the Bering and Panamanian land bridges. American Museum novitates
title_fullStr The spread of existing diurnal squirrels across the Bering and Panamanian land bridges. American Museum novitates
title_full_unstemmed The spread of existing diurnal squirrels across the Bering and Panamanian land bridges. American Museum novitates
title_sort spread of existing diurnal squirrels across the bering and panamanian land bridges. american museum novitates
publisher New York, N.Y. : American Museum of Natural History
publishDate 1961
url http://hdl.handle.net/2246/3483
long_lat ENVELOPE(-60.750,-60.750,-72.000,-72.000)
geographic Bering Strait
Darlington
geographic_facet Bering Strait
Darlington
genre Bering Land Bridge
Bering Strait
genre_facet Bering Land Bridge
Bering Strait
op_relation American Museum novitates
no. 2044
http://hdl.handle.net/2246/3483
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