by PHENOMENICA on MARCH
20, 2013
The humble
salamander may provide evidence to support a controversial claim that the
continents of North and South America were
joined together much earlier than previously thought, scientists say.
The two
continents are generally believed to have been joined together around three
million years ago by the formation of a land bridge what is now Panama that
sealed up the sea channel between them.
However, a new
study of salamanders in South America by Dr Kathryn Elmer of the University of Glasgow ,
has found evidence that challenges these assumptions and supports a
controversial claim by Smithsonian scientist Carlos Jaramillo that most of the Isthmus of Panama was formed around 23 million years ago.
The fusion of
both land masses led to a two-way migration of animals called the ‘Great
American Biotic Interchange’, where animals that had previously evolved
separately moved between the two continents, increasing the biodiversity in
both regions.
The relative
dearth of species of salamander in South America around 30 compared to Central
America, where there are more than 300 species, is usually attributed to the
relatively short time the tiny lizard-like amphibians have had to make their
way south down the Isthmus of Panama.
However, using
DNA analysis, Elmer found that salamanders in South
America had much greater genetic divergence from their Central
American cousins than should be expected if salamanders migrated across a three
million year-old land bridge.
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