Bibliography and Index of the Sirenia and Desmostylia  


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"Estevens, Mário"

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Estevens, Mário (detail)
   
1998
Mamíferos marinhos do Neogénico de Portugal. Distribuição geográfica e estratigráfica.
Comunicações. Actas do V Congresso Nacional de Geologia (Lisbon, Inst. Geol. e Min. & Soc. Geol. de Portugal) 84(1): A161-A164. 1 fig.
–Engl. summ. Engl. abstr.: 6th Intl. Conf. on Paleoceanography, Lisbon: 105-106, 1998. Summarizes the geographic and stratigraphic distribution of sirs. in the Mioc. & Plioc. of Portugal, listing names of localities but not taxa. Notes that the sirs. occur in deposits representing shallower, warmer, and more protected waters than the cetaceans.
 
 
Estevens, Mário (detail)
   
2000
Miocene marine mammals from Portugal: paleogeographical and paleoecological significance.
Ciências da Terra (Lisbon) No. 14: 323-334. 6 figs.
–Portuguese summ. An updated version of Estevens (1998). Presents geological maps and a correlation chart of marine mammal localities, and describes the dramatic shift in abundance from sirs. to cetaceans after the Langhian, due to a shift to deeper- and colder-water deposition.
 
 
Estevens, Mário (detail)
   
2003a
Mamíferos marinhos do Miocénico da península de Setúbal.
Ciências da Terra (Lisbon) No. esp. 5: A60-A63.
–Engl. summ.
 
 
Estevens, Mário (detail)
   
2003b
Mamíferos marinhos do Miocénico de Lisboa.
Ciências da Terra (Lisbon) No. esp. 5: A64-A67.
–Engl. summ.
 
 
Estevens, Mário (detail)
   
2006
Evolução das faunas de mamíferos marinhos do Neogénico de Portugal: correlações paleoambientais e paleobiogeográficas.
VII Congresso Nacional de Geologia, 29 June-13 July 2006, Evora (Portugal): 713-716.
–Engl. summ.
 
 
Prista, Gonçalo Abreu; Estevens, Mário; Agostinho, Rui Jorge; Cachão, Mário (detail)
   
2013
The disappearance of the European/North African Sirenia (Mammalia).
Palaeogeogr. Palaeoclimatol. Palaeoecol. 387: 1-5. 2 figs. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2013.07.013 Oct. 1, 2013 (publ. online July 16, 2013).
–ABSTRACT: Sirenia inhabited the coastal waters of Europe and North Africa from the Eocene until the end of the Pliocene. They are the only herbivorous marine mammals, and their presence in the European/North African realm is supported by almost 400 fossil records. Their dependence on seagrass, as well as their ecological needs, limited their capability to adapt to the climate changes that occurred during the Cenozoic. Their disappearance from European and Mediterranean shores occurred in two different steps: 1) the European Atlantic extinction, related to global cooling and fragmentation of the seagrass meadows, which greatly reduced sirenia habitats and resources; 2) their disappearance from the Mediterranean, linked not to declining resources but to the onset of continental glaciations in the northern hemisphere.
 
 
Prista, Gonçalo Abreu; Estevens, Mário; Agostinho, Rui Jorge; Cachão, Mário (detail)
   
2014
Euro-North African Sirenia biodiversity as a response to climate variations.
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 410: 372-379. 6 tabs. 3 figs. DOI: 10.1016/j.palaeo.2014.06.008. Sept. 15, 2014.
–ABSTRACT: Earth has a latitudinal biodiversity gradient in which more species inhabit tropical than polar regions. Frequently attributed to seasonality, this ecological pattern is applied to the evolution of the Euro-North African sirenians and its relation to Cenozoic climate change. Climate disruption, changes in seasonality, and geological processes such as sea level variations are statistically tested as primary drivers to explain sirenian evolution and regional (amphi-Mediterranean) sirenian speciation and biodiversity.
 
 
Prista, Gon?alo; Cach?o; Estevens, Mario (detail)
   
2023
Considerations on the Portuguese Sirenia (Mammalia) fossil record.
Journal of Iberian Geology https://doi.org/10.1007/s41513-023-00214-w 5 tabs. 7 figs. Aug. 16, 2023.
–ABSTRACT: Marine mammals of the Order Sirenia are good palaeoenvironmental proxies in paleontological studies, due to their specific feeding and habitat adaptations. Fossils of sirenians are rather common in the Portuguese Neogene, having been reported for nearly 100 years, although most findings correspond to rather fragmentary material, with no diagnostic value. Still, some nominal taxa of Sirenia were referred to in the literature, based either on identifiable fossils or on some undescribed material preserved in collections. Following revisions of published occurrences and new descriptions of previously unpublished material, a general review of the fossil sirenians of Portugal is presented, covering both the main geographic areas and the nominal taxa referred to in the literature. Several findings are corrected regarding the taxonomic classification, clearing the fossil record of Portugal, and making available for researchers the complete list of Sirenia findings and their geolocation in the Portuguese Neogene. An analysis of the Portuguese Sirenia fossil record allowed to solve problems associated to the previous published taxonomic works and increase the knowledge regarding the Lower Tagus Basin, Setubal Peninsula, Alvalade Basin and Sirenia evolution in Portugal during the Lower and Middle Miocene. The Portuguese fossil record of sirenians shows evidence that these marine mammals were migrating towards the south, which agrees with the European data, strengthening the present interpretation that sirenians took refuge in the Mediterranean and Gulf of Cadiz by the end of the Miocene, inhabiting these regions up to the beginning of the Northern Hemisphere Continental Glaciations by the end of the Piacenzian.
 RESUMEN: Los mam?feros marinos del Orden Sirenia son buenos proxies paleoambientales en estudios paleontol?gicos, debido a sus adaptaciones espec?ficas de habitat y alimentaci?n. Los f?siles de sirenios son bastante comunes en el Ne?geno portugu?s, habiendo sido citados desde hace casi 100 a?os, aunque la mayor?a de los hallazgos corresponden a material bastante fragmentario, sin valor diagn?stico. A?n as?, algunos taxones nominales de Sirenia fueron referidos en la literatura, basados en f?siles identificables o en alg?n material no descrito conservado en colecciones. Despu?s de las revisiones de las ocurrencias publicadas y de las nuevas descripciones de material in?dito, se presenta una revisi?n general de los sirenios f?siles de Portugal, cubriendo tanto las principales ?reas geogr?ficas como los taxones nominales referidos en la literatura. Se corrigen varios hallazgos relativos a la clasificaci?n taxon?mica, despejando el registro f?sil de Portugal, y poniendo a disposici?n de los investigadores la lista completa de hallazgos de Sirenia y su geolocalizaci?n en el Ne?geno portugu?s. El an?lisis del registro f?sil portugu?s de Sirenia permiti? resolver problemas asociados a los trabajos taxon?micos publicados anteriormente y aumentar el conocimiento sobre la cuenca inferior del Tajo, la pen?nsula de Set?bal, la cuenca de Alvalade y la evoluci?n de Sirenia en Portugal durante el Mioceno inferior y medio. El registro f?sil portugu?s de sirenios muestra evidencias de que estos mam?feros marinos migraban hacia el sur, lo que concuerda con los datos europeos, reforzando la presente interpretaci?n de que los sirenios se refugiaron en el Mediterr?neo y Golfo de C?diz a finales del Mioceno, habitando estas regiones hasta el inicio de las Glaciaciones Continentales del Hemisferio Norte a finales del Piacenziano.

Daryl P. Domning, Research Associate, Department of Paleobiology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. 20560, and Laboratory of Evolutionary Biology, Department of Anatomy, College of Medicine, Howard University, Washington, D.C. 20059.
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