Suscripción institucional·Capítulo de libro·1976·Inglés

The Late Pleistocene Avifauna of La Carolina, Southwestern Ecuador

Kenneth E. Campbell

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Resumen

A collection of fossils from the late Pleistocene site known as La Carolina, located on the arid Santa Elena Peninsula of southwestern Ecuador, contains 53 species of birds, representing 16 families and 42 genera, including 7 extinct species previously recorded only from the Talara Tar Seeps of northwestern Peru. New species of <i>Buteo</i> and <i>Oreopholus</i> are described. The genus <i>Protoconurns</i> Spillman is synonymized with <i>Aratinga</i>. Seventy-two percent of the species recorded from La Carolina were also recorded from the Talara Tar Seeps. The resemblance between the two avifaunas suggests a similarity in age, habitat, and climatological conditions at the two sites at the time of deposition. Evidence suggests that during glacial periods the currently arid Santa Elena Peninsula was part of a broad, forested coastal savanna extending from central Ecuador south to northern Peru.

Cómo citar

Kenneth E. Campbell (1976). The Late Pleistocene Avifauna of La Carolina, Southwestern Ecuador. https://doi.org/10.5479/si.00810266.27.155