Miocene Cyclopid Copepod from a Saline Paleolake in Mojave, California

© 2016 M. .There are remarkably few direct fossil records of Copepoda, which implies that current estimates of the lineage divergence times and inferences on the historical biogeography remain highly dubious for these small-sized crustaceans. The Cyclopidae, a predominantly freshwater copepod family...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hołyńska M., Leggitt L., Kotov A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dspace.kpfu.ru/xmlui/handle/net/105258
id ftkazanuniv:oai:dspace.kpfu.ru:net/105258
record_format openpolar
spelling ftkazanuniv:oai:dspace.kpfu.ru:net/105258 2023-05-15T17:36:11+02:00 Miocene Cyclopid Copepod from a Saline Paleolake in Mojave, California Hołyńska M. Leggitt L. Kotov A. 2016 http://dspace.kpfu.ru/xmlui/handle/net/105258 unknown Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 2 345 61 http://dspace.kpfu.ru/xmlui/bitstream/net/105258/1/SCOPUS05677920-2016-61-2-SID84973294663-a1.pdf 0567-7920 http://dspace.kpfu.ru/xmlui/handle/net/105258 SCOPUS05677920-2016-61-2-SID84973294663 amphi-Pacific Barstow Formation biogeography Copepoda Cyclopidae Miocene ontogeny saline lake Article 2016 ftkazanuniv 2022-01-01T09:36:40Z © 2016 M. .There are remarkably few direct fossil records of Copepoda, which implies that current estimates of the lineage divergence times and inferences on the historical biogeography remain highly dubious for these small-sized crustaceans. The Cyclopidae, a predominantly freshwater copepod family with 1000+ species and distributed worldwide, has no fossil record at all. Recent collections from the middle Miocene Barstow Formation in Southern California resulted in ample material of finely preserved cyclopid fossils, including both adult and larval stages. To document the antennulary setation pattern in the adult and copepodid instars we used a coding system that is coherent between sexes and developmental stages. The majority of the cyclopid fossils, coming from saline lake environment, represent the modern genus Apocyclops, a euryhaline, thermophilic group occurring both in the New World and Old World. A new species Apocyclops californicus is described, based on the short medial spine and spiny ornamentation of the free segment of leg 5, spinule ornamentation of pediger 5, and well-developed protuberances of the intercoxal sclerite of leg 4. The presence of antennal allobasis and the features of the swimming legs unambiguously place the Miocene Apocyclops in the A. panamensis-clade, a predominantly amphi-Pacific group. The middle Miocene fossils with clear affinities to a subgroup of Apocyclops imply an early Miocene or Paleogene origin of the genus. Based on the geographic patterns of the species richness and morphology in Apocyclops and its presumed closest relative, genus Metacyclops, we hypothesize that: (i) the ancestor of Apocyclops, similar in morphology to some cave-dweller Metacyclops occurring today in the peri-Mediterranean region, might have arrived in North America from Europe via the Thulean North Atlantic bridge in the late Paleocene-early Eocene; (ii) Eocene termination of the Thulean land connection might have resulted in the divergence of Apocyclops from the Metacyclops stock. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Kazan Federal University Digital Repository Pacific Saline Lake ENVELOPE(-111.528,-111.528,57.081,57.081)
institution Open Polar
collection Kazan Federal University Digital Repository
op_collection_id ftkazanuniv
language unknown
topic amphi-Pacific
Barstow Formation
biogeography
Copepoda
Cyclopidae
Miocene
ontogeny
saline lake
spellingShingle amphi-Pacific
Barstow Formation
biogeography
Copepoda
Cyclopidae
Miocene
ontogeny
saline lake
Hołyńska M.
Leggitt L.
Kotov A.
Miocene Cyclopid Copepod from a Saline Paleolake in Mojave, California
topic_facet amphi-Pacific
Barstow Formation
biogeography
Copepoda
Cyclopidae
Miocene
ontogeny
saline lake
description © 2016 M. .There are remarkably few direct fossil records of Copepoda, which implies that current estimates of the lineage divergence times and inferences on the historical biogeography remain highly dubious for these small-sized crustaceans. The Cyclopidae, a predominantly freshwater copepod family with 1000+ species and distributed worldwide, has no fossil record at all. Recent collections from the middle Miocene Barstow Formation in Southern California resulted in ample material of finely preserved cyclopid fossils, including both adult and larval stages. To document the antennulary setation pattern in the adult and copepodid instars we used a coding system that is coherent between sexes and developmental stages. The majority of the cyclopid fossils, coming from saline lake environment, represent the modern genus Apocyclops, a euryhaline, thermophilic group occurring both in the New World and Old World. A new species Apocyclops californicus is described, based on the short medial spine and spiny ornamentation of the free segment of leg 5, spinule ornamentation of pediger 5, and well-developed protuberances of the intercoxal sclerite of leg 4. The presence of antennal allobasis and the features of the swimming legs unambiguously place the Miocene Apocyclops in the A. panamensis-clade, a predominantly amphi-Pacific group. The middle Miocene fossils with clear affinities to a subgroup of Apocyclops imply an early Miocene or Paleogene origin of the genus. Based on the geographic patterns of the species richness and morphology in Apocyclops and its presumed closest relative, genus Metacyclops, we hypothesize that: (i) the ancestor of Apocyclops, similar in morphology to some cave-dweller Metacyclops occurring today in the peri-Mediterranean region, might have arrived in North America from Europe via the Thulean North Atlantic bridge in the late Paleocene-early Eocene; (ii) Eocene termination of the Thulean land connection might have resulted in the divergence of Apocyclops from the Metacyclops stock.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Hołyńska M.
Leggitt L.
Kotov A.
author_facet Hołyńska M.
Leggitt L.
Kotov A.
author_sort Hołyńska M.
title Miocene Cyclopid Copepod from a Saline Paleolake in Mojave, California
title_short Miocene Cyclopid Copepod from a Saline Paleolake in Mojave, California
title_full Miocene Cyclopid Copepod from a Saline Paleolake in Mojave, California
title_fullStr Miocene Cyclopid Copepod from a Saline Paleolake in Mojave, California
title_full_unstemmed Miocene Cyclopid Copepod from a Saline Paleolake in Mojave, California
title_sort miocene cyclopid copepod from a saline paleolake in mojave, california
publishDate 2016
url http://dspace.kpfu.ru/xmlui/handle/net/105258
long_lat ENVELOPE(-111.528,-111.528,57.081,57.081)
geographic Pacific
Saline Lake
geographic_facet Pacific
Saline Lake
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source SCOPUS05677920-2016-61-2-SID84973294663
op_relation Acta Palaeontologica Polonica
2
345
61
http://dspace.kpfu.ru/xmlui/bitstream/net/105258/1/SCOPUS05677920-2016-61-2-SID84973294663-a1.pdf
0567-7920
http://dspace.kpfu.ru/xmlui/handle/net/105258
_version_ 1766135595614076928