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In a puzzling discovery, a researcher from North Carolina State
University along with U.S.,
Peruvian and Argentine collaborators has shown that two undiscovered penguins
species reached equatorial regions tens of millions of years earlier than
expected.
The penguins’ sites were discovered by Peruvian scientists in
2005 and Paleontologist Dr. Julia Clarke assistant professor of marine, earth
and atmospheric sciences at NC State has studied the species.
According to her findings, the first of the new species,
Icadyptes salasi, stood 5 feet tall and lived about 36 million years ago and
the second one, called Perudyptes devriesi, lived about 42 million years ago.
“We tend to think of penguins as being cold-adapted
species,” Clarke says, “even the small penguins in equatorial regions today,
but the new fossils date back to one of the warmest periods in the last 65
million years of Earth’s history. The evidence indicates that penguins reached
low latitude regions more than 30 million years prior to our previous
estimates.”
Clarke estimates that the two Peruvian species are the
product of two separate dispersal events. The ancestors of Perudyptes appear to
have inhabited Antarctica, while those of Icadyptes may have originated near New Zealand.
“These Peruvian species are early branches off the penguin
family tree, that are comparatively distant cousins of living penguins,” Clarke
says. “In addition, current global warming is occurring on a significantly
shorter timescale. The data from these new fossil species cannot be used to
argue that warming wouldn’t negatively impact living penguins.”
Clarke’s report was published in this week's online edition
of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
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