Annual Review of Marine Science, volume 17, issue 1, pages 281-299

Land Bridges and Rafting Theories to Explain Terrestrial-Vertebrate Biodiversity on Madagascar

JASON R. ALI 1
S.Blair Hedges 2
1
 
1Museum of Zoology, Senckenberg Dresden, Dresden, Germany; email: jason.ali@senckenberg.de
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2025-01-16
scimago Q1
SJR4.891
CiteScore33.6
Impact factor14.3
ISSN19411405, 19410611
Abstract

Madagascar's celebrated land-vertebrate assemblage has long been studied and discussed. How the ancestors of the 30 different lineages arrived on the island, which has existed since 85 Mya and is separated from neighboring Africa by 430 km of water, is a deeply important question. Did the colonizations take place when the landmass formed part of Gondwana, or did they occur later and involve either now-drowned causeways or overwater dispersal (on vegetation rafts or by floating/swimming)? Following a historical review, we appraise the geological–geophysical evidence and the faunal-suite colonization record. Twenty-six of the clades are explained by temporally stochastic overwater dispersals, spanning 69–0 Mya, while two others are considered Gondwanan vicariant relicts. Due to a lack of information, the remaining two groups cannot be evaluated. The findings thus appear to resolve a debate that has rumbled along, with sporadic eruptions, since the mid-1800s.

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