Publication | Open Access
Amber from western Amazonia reveals Neotropical diversity during the middle Miocene
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Citations
17
References
2006
Year
EngineeringEntomologyEarth ScienceArthropod TaxonomyPhylogeneticsBiogeographyNortheastern PeruPalaeo-environmental ReconstructionWestern AmazoniaBiodiversityTertiary InsectsMiddle MioceneBiologyTerrestrial ArthropodNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyTerrestrial BiotaPaleoecologyPaleobotany
Tertiary insects and arachnids have been virtually unknown from the vast western Amazonian basin. We report here the discovery of amber from this region containing a diverse fossil arthropod fauna (13 hexapod families and 3 arachnid species) and abundant microfossil inclusions (pollen, spores, algae, and cyanophyceae). This unique fossil assemblage, recovered from middle Miocene deposits of northeastern Peru, greatly increases the known diversity of Cenozoic tropical-equatorial arthropods and microorganisms and provides insights into the biogeography and evolutionary history of modern Neotropical biota. It also strengthens evidence for the presence of more modern, high-diversity tropical rainforest ecosystems during the middle Miocene in western Amazonia.
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