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Supplementary material from "Seasonal migration of marsupial megafauna in Pleistocene Sahul (Australia–New Guinea)"

Version 2 2017-09-19, 13:37
Version 1 2017-09-04, 09:22
Posted on 2017-09-19 - 13:37
Seasonal two-way migration is an ecological phenomenon observed in a wide range of large-bodied placental mammals, but is conspicuously absent in all modern marsupials. Most extant marsupials are typically smaller in body size in comparison to their migratory placental cousins, possibly limiting their potential to undertake long-distance seasonal migrations. But what about earlier, now-extinct giant marsupial megafauna? Here we present new geochemical analyses which show that the largest of the extinct marsupial herbivores, the enormous wombat-like Diprotodon optatum, undertook seasonal, two-way latitudinal migration in eastern Sahul (Pleistocene Australia–New Guinea). Our data infer that this giant marsupial had the potential to perform round-trip journeys of as much as 200 km annually, which is reminiscent of modern East African mammal migrations. These findings provide, to our knowledge, the first evidence for repetitive seasonal migration in any metatherian (including marsupials), living or extinct, and point to an ecological phenomenon absent from the continent since the Late Pleistocene.

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Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences

AUTHORS (9)

Gilbert J. Price
Kyle J. Ferguson
Gregory E. Webb
Yue-xing Feng
Pennilyn Higgins
Ai Duc Nguyen
Jian-xin Zhao
Renaud Joannes-Boyau
Julien Louys
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