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Chenoanas asiatica sp. nov. (1 Viewer)

Fred Ruhe

Well-known member
Netherlands
Nikita V. Zelenkov, Thomas A. Stidham, Nicolay V. Martynovich, Natalia V. Volkova, Qiang Li & Zhuding Qiu, 2018

The middle Miocene duck Chenoanas (Aves, Anatidae): new species, phylogeny and geographical range

Papers in Palaeontology early view

Abstract: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/spp2.1107/abstract


A notable reorganization of the waterfowl communities apparently took place across Eurasia during the middle to early late Miocene, when primitive and extinct anatid taxa (e.g. Mionetta) were replaced by more derived forms, including extant genera. However, little is known about the diversity of Eurasian waterfowl and their palaeobiogeography during this critical interval. In particular, larger ducks of the middle Miocene are represented by poorly known taxa including ‘Anas’ sansaniensis from western and central Europe and Chenoanas deserti from Western Mongolia. We report new geographically widespread specimens referred to Chenoanas from Mongolia, eastern Siberia, and China that include a new species, Chenoanas asiatica sp. nov., and allow for recognition of the European ‘Anas’ sansaniensis as a member of Chenoanas. We describe the oldest remains of Chenoanas sansaniensis from eastern Siberia, which supports a westward dispersal or range expansion of this group of ducks during the Miocene, comparable to the previously established biogeographical affinities of many Eurasian mammals. These data also support a growing body of evidence that avian faunas of Siberia were similar to European ones during the Middle Miocene Climatic Optimum. Our data indicate a wide Eurasian distribution (more than 8000 km) and a greater diversity within the genus I]Chenoanas[/I] during the late early to middle Miocene. The phylogenetic analysis of Chenoanas suggests that it may be a primitive member of Anatini, and thus does not belong to the basal radiation of extinct relatives of stiff-tailed ducks (Oxyura and its relatives). Species of Chenoanas were probably not specialized divers.

Enjoy,

Fred
 
SYSTEMATIC PALAEONTOLOGY
by Nikita V. Zelenkov and Thomas A. Stidham

Class Aves Linnaeus, 1758
Order Anseriformes Wagler, 1831
Family Anatidae Leach, 1820
Genus Chenoanas Zelenkov, 2012
1891 Anas Linnaeus; Lydekker, p. 114 (pars).
1912 Anas Linnaeus; Paris, p. 290 (pars).
1933 Anas Linnaeus; Lambrecht, S. 356 (pars).
1964 Anas Linnaeus; Brodkorb, p. 220 (pars).
1987 Anas Linnaeus; Cheneval, p. 142 (pars).
2000 Anas Linnaeus; Cheneval, p. 329 (pars).
2002 Anas Linnaeus; Mlıkovsky, p. 118 (pars).
2012 Chenoanas Zelenkov, p. 520.
2013 Chenoanas Zelenkov; Zelenkov & Martynovich, p. 79.
2015 Chenoanas Zelenkov; Zelenkov & Kurochkin, p. 174.
Type species. Chenoanas deserta Zelenkov, 2012, middle Miocene of Western Mongolia.

Included species. Chenoanas sansaniensis (Milne-Edwards, 1867), late early to middle Miocene of eastern Siberia and France; C. deserta Zelenkov, 2012, middle Miocene of Western Mongolia; C. asiatica Zelenkov & Stidham sp. nov., middle Miocene of Inner Mongolia (China) and Western Mongolia.

Chenoanas asiatica sp. nov.
LSID. urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:BE619470-4421-4709-94E6-0EC3DCC2D3FD

Derivation of name. The species name refers to the Asiatic distribution of the species.
Holotype. PIN 4869/68, proximal fragment of right humerus.

Enjoy,

Fred
 
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