Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: http://hdl.handle.net/10362/164897
Título: Squamates, rodents, and birds from Holocene deposits of the Illa Grossa Island (Columbretes Islands, Castellón, Spain)
Autor: Marquina-Blasco, Rafael
Fagoaga, Ana
Crespo, Vicente D.
Martínez-Ortí, Alberto
Bailon, Salvador
Sánchez-Marco, Antonio
Santisteban, Daniel Gracia Monferrer Carlos de
Ruiz-Sánchez, Francisco Javier
Palavras-chave: conservation palaeobiology
islets
Mediterranean
palaeoecology
small vertebrates
Vipers
Mathematics(all)
SDG 14 - Life Below Water
Data: Jun-2023
Resumo: The Columbretes Islands (eastern Spain) comprise a volcanic archipelago 50 km off the eastern Span¬ish coast. Illa Grossa is the main island of the archipelago. After the settlement of humans during the mid-19th century, strong modifications in biodiversity took place, including the reduction of the non-flying vertebrate fauna to a single taxon, Podarcis liolepis atratus (Boscá, 1916). The study of the fossils yielded at the COLT site (dated by AMC between 2780-2724 cal BP and 2600-2492 cal BP) from a loess deposit located at the south of Illa Grossa Island shows that this fauna was more diverse in the past. The assemblage was dominated by squamate reptiles, belonging to two lizards (Chalcides bedriagai (Boscá, 1880) and cf. Podarcis Wagler, 1830) and one snake (Vipera cf. latastei Boscá, 1878). The record in the late Holocene of Columbretes of Vipera cf. latastei settles the existing controversy about the identity of snakes in the archipelago. Regarding Chalcides bedriagai, this is the first record of its presence in the Columbretes Islands. Other faunal elements recovered from the site include at least six species of undetermined birds (passeriforms and procellariforms) and the anthropophilic Mus cf. musculus Linnaeus, 1758. The origin of the squamates taxa from Columbretes palaeontological site (COLT) is still unclear, but was probably related to the Late Pleistocene-Greenlandian (11 700 to 8300 BP, Early Holocene) sea transgression, natural passive colonization, and/or human intro¬duction. We hypothesize implications for the conservation and management of the Natural Reserve.
Descrição: To the memory of Dr Fernando Robles, deceased on 2019, who initiated the study of the fossil gastropods recovered from the COLT site. This work has been possible thanks to the Fundació Dávalos-Fletcher (Castelló de la Plana, Spain) who has funded this project. The authors want to thank the editor Dr Hussam Zaher (Universidade de São Paulo) and the reviewer Dr Georgios Georgialis (University of Zurich) for his corrections, suggestions and the constructive comments. RMB is beneficiary of a Margarita Salas grant (MS21-164) for the training of young doctors, within the requalification of the Spanish university system, financied by the European Union, Next Generation EU. AF had an APOSTD postdoctoral grant (APOST/2021/110, Generalitat Valenciana) co-financied by the European Social Fund, and after that a Margarita Salas contract (MS21-048) for the training of young doctors, within the requalification of the Spanish university system, financied by the European Union, Next Generation EU. VDC thanks the Stimulus of Scientific Employment, Individual Support – 2021 Call grant by the Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (Portugal, CEECIND/03080/2021) Publisher Copyright: © 2023 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10362/164897
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5852/cr-palevol2023v22a18
ISSN: 1631-0683
Aparece nas colecções:Home collection (FCT)

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