Panbiogeography of the Santa María Amajac area, Hidalgo, Mexico

Authors

  • Arturo Palma-Ramírez
  • Irene Goyenechea
  • Jesús M. Castillo-Cerón

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7550/rmb.44392

Keywords:

paleolake, track analysis, node, birds, mammals, fossils.

Abstract

The Santa María Amajac paleolake is located in the central portion of Hidalgo, Mexico. Twenty-sevenfossil taxa of aquatic and terrestrial plants, gastropods, ostracods, amphibians, and mammals identified previouslyin the area of the paleolake were selected and their distribution in America during the Late Pliocene- Pleistocenewas analyzed using the panbiogeographic method. As a result of the overlap of 27 individual tracks, 5 generalizedtracks were obtained: I) Western North American, II) Central North American, III) Eastern North American, IV)Mesoamerican, and V) South American. The generalized tracks are consistent with previous proposals for extantgymnosperms, amphibians, sauropsids, birds, mammals, aquatic plants, insects, beetles, and nematodes, suggestingthat distribution patterns have prevailed since the late Pliocene (Blancan). Four biogeographic nodes were identified,2 situated in North America, in California and Colorado, the third located in the Santa María Amajac area in centralMexico, and the fourth located in Central America.

Author Biographies

Arturo Palma-Ramírez

Léxico Estratigráfico, Servicio Geológico Mexicano.

Irene Goyenechea

Laboratorio de Sistemática Molecular, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Hidalgo.

Jesús M. Castillo-Cerón

Museo de Paleontología, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Hidalgo.

Published

2015-01-15

Issue

Section

BIOGEOGRAFÍA