0198566123.pdf

(Marcin) #1
MODES OF ORIGIN 17

Box 2.2 The splitting of Gondwanaland and the debate between vicariant and dispersalist

explanations in island biogeography

The origin of many contemporary continental-
fragment islands is directly linked with the
breakup of Gondwanaland, the southern
supercontinent that split apart from Pangaea, the
last unique landmass, some 160 Ma. At the start
of the Cretaceous period (c.140 Ma)
Gondwanaland was still intact. By the Late
Cretaceous (c.80 Ma), however, South America,
Africa, and peninsular India were already discrete
entities (Stanley 1999). It was during the
Cretaceous that first Madagascar, and later the
Seychelles and Kerguelen micro-fragments, began
their trip to their present isolated geographic


locations in the south-west, north-west, and
south of the Indian Ocean, respectively. Australia
and New Zealand rifted from Antarctica about
100 Ma, and subsequently, New Zealand broke
first from Australia and then from Antarctica
about 80 Ma (Lomolino et al. 2005). While other
elements of Gondwanaland drifted toward the
lower latitudes, the Antarctic slowly moved
poleward, so that by about 24 Ma it was located
over the South Pole, triggering the development
of a great icecap.
Although Kerguelen is too far south (50
latitude) to possess a diverse biota, other ancient

(a)

(c) (d)

(b)
Arabian
Peninsula

Arabian
Peninsula

Arabian
Peninsula

Arabian
Peninsula

200 my

130 my 100 my

160 my

Australia

Australia

Australia

Australia

Africa Africa

Africa

South
America

South
America
South
America

South
America

India

India

India

India

Antarctica

Antarctica

Antarctica

New Zealand

New Zealand New Zealand

New Zealand

South Pole

South Pole South Pole

South Pole

Madagascar

Madagascar

Madagascar

Madagascar

Antarctica

Africa

The stages in the breaking up of Gondwanaland. Bold lines show zones of sea-floor spreading. (From Storey 1995.)

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