The Cuban Crocodile (Crocodylus rhombifer) from Late Quaternary Underwater Cave Deposits in the Dominican Republic

IF 1.1 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION American Museum Novitates Pub Date : 2018-12-21 DOI:10.1206/3916.1
G. Morgan, Nancy A. Albury, R. Rímoli, Phillip Lehman, A. Rosenberger, S. Cooke
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A skull, mandibles, and two vertebrae of a Cuban crocodile were also found in a second cave called Ni-Rahu, northeast of Santo Domingo. We identify the fossil crocodile skulls from the Dominican Republic as Crocodylus rhombifer because they share the following characters with modern skulls of C. rhombifer from Cuba (as well as fossil skulls from Cuba, the Bahamas, and Cayman Islands): short, broad, and deep rostrum; large orbits; convex nasals along the midline (midrostral boss); prominent swelling on the lacrimals anterior and medial to the orbits; low but obvious ridges extending anteriorly from the lacrimals to the nasals and posteriorly from the lacrimals to the prefrontals and frontals, outlining a distinct diamond- or rhomboid-shaped structure; strongly concave interorbital region and cranial roof; high, narrow ridges on the internal margins of the orbits, extending from the prefrontals to the frontals and posteriorly to the postorbitals; prominent ridges along the lateral margins of the cranial roof on the postorbitals and squamosals, terminating as noticeable protuberances on the posterolateral corners of the squamosals; premaxillary/maxillary suture on the palate essentially horizontal or transverse to the long axis of the skull at the level of the first maxillary tooth; 13 teeth in the maxilla. Certain aspects of the ecology and anatomy of living Crocodylus rhombifer in Cuba, and carbon isotope data from fossil crocodile bones from both the Dominican Republic and the Bahamas, indicate that the Cuban crocodile is a terrestrially adapted predator. The fossil deposits in Oleg's Bat Cave and other underwater caves in the Dominican Republic lack freshwater vertebrates, such as fish and turtles, but contain abundant samples of hystricognath rodents, small ground sloths, and other terrestrial vertebrates, including large land tortoises, that apparently were the primary prey of the crocodiles. Bats are abundant in the fossil deposits in Oleg's Bat Cave, and may have been an additional food source. Bone collagen from a tibia of C. rhombifer from Oleg's Bat Cave yielded an AMS radiocarbon date of 6460 ±30 ryrBP (equivalent to 7320 to 7430 cal yrBP). The chronology for the local extinction of C. rhombifer in Hispaniola is currently unknown, except to document the presence of this species in the eastern Dominican Republic in the early Holocene. Radiocarbon dates and historical records confirm that Cuban crocodiles survived into the period of European colonization (post-1492) in the Bahamas and on Grand Cayman. The only species of crocodile currently found in Hispaniola, the American crocodile (C. acutus), occurs in coastal marine habitats and in two inland brackishwater lakes: Lago Enriquillo in the Dominican Republic and the nearby Etang Saumâtre in Haiti. C. acutus has no fossil record in Hispaniola or elsewhere in the West Indies, suggesting that this species may be a very recent (late Holocene) immigrant in the Antillean region. Crocodylus rhombifer has one of the most limited geographic ranges of any living crocodylian species, known only from freshwater swamps in south-central Cuba and the Isla de Juventud (Isla de Pinos) off the southwestern coast of Cuba. Locally extinct or extirpated populations of C. rhombifer from fossil deposits in the Dominican Republic, Grand Cayman, and the Bahamas document a considerably wider distribution for this species during the Late Quaternary.","PeriodicalId":55527,"journal":{"name":"American Museum Novitates","volume":"1 1","pages":"1 - 56"},"PeriodicalIF":1.1000,"publicationDate":"2018-12-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1206/3916.1","citationCount":"10","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"American Museum Novitates","FirstCategoryId":"93","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1206/3916.1","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"环境科学与生态学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 10

Abstract

ABSTRACT Late Quaternary fossils representing a locally extinct population of the Cuban crocodile (Crocodylus rhombifer) are reported from two underwater caves in the Dominican Republic. A large fossil sample of C. rhombifer, from Oleg's Bat Cave near Bavaro in the southeastern Dominican Republic, consists of four nearly complete skulls, numerous isolated cranial elements and mandibles, and more than 100 postcranial bones representing most of the skeleton. These fossils were collected from a completely submerged portion of the cave at a depth of 11 m and about 100 m from the nearest entrance. A skull, mandibles, and two vertebrae of a Cuban crocodile were also found in a second cave called Ni-Rahu, northeast of Santo Domingo. We identify the fossil crocodile skulls from the Dominican Republic as Crocodylus rhombifer because they share the following characters with modern skulls of C. rhombifer from Cuba (as well as fossil skulls from Cuba, the Bahamas, and Cayman Islands): short, broad, and deep rostrum; large orbits; convex nasals along the midline (midrostral boss); prominent swelling on the lacrimals anterior and medial to the orbits; low but obvious ridges extending anteriorly from the lacrimals to the nasals and posteriorly from the lacrimals to the prefrontals and frontals, outlining a distinct diamond- or rhomboid-shaped structure; strongly concave interorbital region and cranial roof; high, narrow ridges on the internal margins of the orbits, extending from the prefrontals to the frontals and posteriorly to the postorbitals; prominent ridges along the lateral margins of the cranial roof on the postorbitals and squamosals, terminating as noticeable protuberances on the posterolateral corners of the squamosals; premaxillary/maxillary suture on the palate essentially horizontal or transverse to the long axis of the skull at the level of the first maxillary tooth; 13 teeth in the maxilla. Certain aspects of the ecology and anatomy of living Crocodylus rhombifer in Cuba, and carbon isotope data from fossil crocodile bones from both the Dominican Republic and the Bahamas, indicate that the Cuban crocodile is a terrestrially adapted predator. The fossil deposits in Oleg's Bat Cave and other underwater caves in the Dominican Republic lack freshwater vertebrates, such as fish and turtles, but contain abundant samples of hystricognath rodents, small ground sloths, and other terrestrial vertebrates, including large land tortoises, that apparently were the primary prey of the crocodiles. Bats are abundant in the fossil deposits in Oleg's Bat Cave, and may have been an additional food source. Bone collagen from a tibia of C. rhombifer from Oleg's Bat Cave yielded an AMS radiocarbon date of 6460 ±30 ryrBP (equivalent to 7320 to 7430 cal yrBP). The chronology for the local extinction of C. rhombifer in Hispaniola is currently unknown, except to document the presence of this species in the eastern Dominican Republic in the early Holocene. Radiocarbon dates and historical records confirm that Cuban crocodiles survived into the period of European colonization (post-1492) in the Bahamas and on Grand Cayman. The only species of crocodile currently found in Hispaniola, the American crocodile (C. acutus), occurs in coastal marine habitats and in two inland brackishwater lakes: Lago Enriquillo in the Dominican Republic and the nearby Etang Saumâtre in Haiti. C. acutus has no fossil record in Hispaniola or elsewhere in the West Indies, suggesting that this species may be a very recent (late Holocene) immigrant in the Antillean region. Crocodylus rhombifer has one of the most limited geographic ranges of any living crocodylian species, known only from freshwater swamps in south-central Cuba and the Isla de Juventud (Isla de Pinos) off the southwestern coast of Cuba. Locally extinct or extirpated populations of C. rhombifer from fossil deposits in the Dominican Republic, Grand Cayman, and the Bahamas document a considerably wider distribution for this species during the Late Quaternary.
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多米尼加共和国晚第四纪水下洞穴沉积物中的古巴鳄(Crocodylus rhombifer)
在多米尼加共和国的两个水下洞穴中发现了代表当地灭绝的古巴鳄鱼(Crocodylus rhombifer)种群的晚第四纪化石。在多米尼加共和国东南部巴瓦罗附近的奥列格蝙蝠洞发现的一个大的C. rhombifer化石样本,包括四个几乎完整的头骨,许多独立的颅骨和下颌骨,以及代表大部分骨骼的100多块颅后骨骼。这些化石是在洞穴的一个完全被淹没的部分收集的,深度为11米,距离最近的入口约100米。在圣多明各东北部的另一个名为Ni-Rahu的洞穴中,还发现了一只古巴鳄鱼的头骨、下颌骨和两块椎骨。我们将来自多米尼加共和国的鳄鱼头骨化石鉴定为Crocodylus rhombifer,因为它们与来自古巴的C. rhombifer现代头骨(以及来自古巴、巴哈马和开曼群岛的头骨化石)具有以下特征:喙短、宽、深;大型轨道;鼻沿中线凸出(中吻突);眶前内侧泪口明显肿胀;低而明显的脊状结构,从泪口向前延伸至鼻部,从泪口向后延伸至额前和额前,形成明显的菱形或菱形结构;眶间及颅顶强烈凹;眼眶内缘有高而窄的脊状突起,从前额部延伸到前额部,并向后延伸到后额部;后颊和鳞片上颅顶外侧缘有突出的脊状突起,在鳞片后外侧角以明显的突起终止;上颌前/上颌缝合在上颌第一颗牙的水平面上,基本上与颅骨长轴水平或横向;上颌骨有13颗牙齿。古巴现存菱形鳄(Crocodylus rhombifer)的生态学和解剖学的某些方面,以及来自多米尼加共和国和巴哈马的鳄鱼骨骼化石的碳同位素数据表明,古巴鳄鱼是一种适应陆地的捕食者。奥列格蝙蝠洞和多米尼加共和国其他水下洞穴的化石沉积物中没有淡水脊椎动物,比如鱼和乌龟,但却含有大量的水栖啮齿类动物、小型地懒和其他陆生脊椎动物的样本,包括大型陆龟,它们显然是鳄鱼的主要猎物。在奥列格蝙蝠洞的化石沉积物中有大量的蝙蝠,可能是额外的食物来源。来自Oleg蝙蝠洞的C. rhombifer胫骨的骨胶原产生的AMS放射性碳定年为6460±30 ryrBP(相当于7320 ~ 7430 cal ryrBP)。在伊斯帕尼奥拉岛,C. rhombifer在当地灭绝的时间目前尚不清楚,除了在全新世早期记录了该物种在多米尼加共和国东部的存在。放射性碳年代测定法和历史记录证实,古巴鳄鱼在欧洲殖民时期(1492年后)在巴哈马和大开曼岛存活下来。目前在伊斯帕尼奥拉岛发现的唯一一种鳄鱼是美洲鳄(C. acutus),它出现在沿海的海洋栖息地和两个内陆咸淡水湖泊:多米尼加共和国的拉戈恩里克略湖和附近海地的埃唐索姆湖。在伊斯帕尼奥拉岛或西印度群岛的其他地方没有发现C. acutus的化石记录,这表明该物种可能是最近(全新世晚期)在安的列斯地区的移民。在所有现存的鳄鱼物种中,扁鳄的地理分布范围是最有限的,人们只知道它生活在古巴中南部的淡水沼泽和古巴西南海岸外的芬图德岛(皮诺斯岛)。从多米尼加共和国、大开曼群岛和巴哈马群岛的化石沉积物中发现的当地灭绝或灭绝的C. rhombifer种群表明,该物种在晚第四纪的分布范围相当广泛。
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来源期刊
American Museum Novitates
American Museum Novitates 环境科学-动物学
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
6.70%
发文量
8
审稿时长
>36 weeks
期刊介绍: The Novitates (Latin for "new acquaintances"), published continuously and numbered consecutively since 1921, are short papers that contain descriptions of new forms and reports in zoology, paleontology, and geology.
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