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1 September 2011 Snakes from Griesbeckerzell (Langhian, Early Badenian), North Alpine Foreland Basin (Germany), with comments on the evolution of snake faunas in Central Europe during the Miocene Climatic Optimum
Martin Ivanov, Madelaine Böhme
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Abstract

Two fossil-bearing levels at Griesbeckerzell (the central part of the North Alpine Foreland Basin; Early Badenian, Mittlere Serie of the Upper Freshwater Molasse) have produced a rich reptile fauna that includes a large number of snakes, i.e. Grisbeckerzell lb (OSM E, 15.0–14.9 Ma): Boidae: Python sp.; Colubridae: “Coluber” cf. caspioides; Vipendae: Vipera sp. (“oriental vipers” group) or Daboia sp.; Griesbeckerzell la (beginning of unit OSM F, 14.77 Ma): Boidae: Bavarioboa aff. hermi, cf. Bavarioboa sp., Python sp.; Colubridae: “Coluber” cf. caspioides, Coluber hungaricus, “Coluber” sp., Texasophis cf. meint, Natrix sp.; Elapidae: Micrurus cf. gallicus; Viperidae: Vipera sp. (“Oriental vipers” group), Vipera sp. (“European vipers” group; “Vipera aspis complex”). The Miocene Climatic Optimum (MCO) is documented in central Europe by the presence of highly thermophilous reptile taxa, including Python sp., which is the most thermophilous reptile known from the European Neogene. The presence of Python sp. in Griesbeckerzell 1 a pushes up the last appearance date (LAD) of this large Booidea in central Europe into the early Middle Miocene. The dramatic decrease in temperatures after 14.0 Ma (i.e. below 16°C in mean annual air temperature) was most probably responsible for the extinction of the European non-Erycinae Booidea, regardless of food competition. The genus Bavarioboa (Bavarioboa aff. hermi) and possibly “Colubercaspioides (“Coluber” cf. caspioides) both have their LADs in Griesbeckerzell la; Coluber hungaricus probably represents the earliest appearance (FAD) of this colubrid snake. Palaeoclimatic analyses of the herpetofauna indicate for both Griesbeckerzell levels humid conditions of between 750 and 1 025 mm mean annual precipitation. Temperature estimates combined with palaeobotanical data indicate a warm, subtropical climate with mean annual temperatures of 18.6 to 20.8°C, cold month temperatures with 12.6 to 13.3°C, and warm month temperatures with 25.1 to 28.1°C.

© Publications Scientifiques du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris.
Martin Ivanov and Madelaine Böhme "Snakes from Griesbeckerzell (Langhian, Early Badenian), North Alpine Foreland Basin (Germany), with comments on the evolution of snake faunas in Central Europe during the Miocene Climatic Optimum," Geodiversitas 33(3), 411-449, (1 September 2011). https://doi.org/10.5252/g2011n3a2
Received: 27 November 2009; Accepted: 1 October 2010; Published: 1 September 2011
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KEYWORDS
bassin d'avant-pays nordalpin
Boidae
Colubridae
Elapidae
Miocene Climatic Optimum
North Alpine Foreland Basin
Optimum climatique du Miocène
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