Changing Continental Arrangements and the Origin of Australia's Non-Passeriform Continental Avifauna
- 1 July 1975
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Emu - Austral Ornithology
- Vol. 75 (3) , 97-112
- https://doi.org/10.1071/mu9750097
Abstract
Rich, P. V. 1974. Changing continental arrangements and the origin of Australia's non-passeriform continental avifauna. Emu 75: 97–112. Classically the origin of Australia's avifauna has been sought in south-eastern Asia with the Malay Archipelago serving as the only link between two major biogeographical realms. During the past two decades however, developments in the geological sciences have suggested strongly that the Australian continent has not always been where it is today with respect to other land masses. In fact, as little as fifty million years ago it was close to, if not directly connected with, Antarctica, which in turn probably was joined to South America by an archipelago. Contemporaneously, milder climatic regimes dominated Antarctica, supporting a diverse flora that included forests of podocarps, other conifers and Nothofagus. Certainly this possible austral dispersal route, as well as the Indonesian archipelago, needs to be kept in mind in future considerations of the Australian avifauna's origin, specially for its distinctive groups such as emus, cassowaries, megapodes, pigeons and parrots among others.Keywords
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