Published 2024 | Version v1
Journal article Restricted

Biogeography and History of the Prehuman Native Mammal Fauna of the New Zealand Region

Description

(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) The widespread perception of New Zealand is of a group of remote islands dominated by reptiles and birds, with no native mammals except a few bats. In fact, the islands themselves are only part of a wider New Zealand Region which includes a large section of Antarctica. In total, the New Zealand Region has at least 63 recognised taxa (species, subspecies and distinguishable clades) of living native mammals, only six of which are bats. The rest comprise a large and vigorous assemblage of 57 native marine mammals (9 pinnipeds and 48 cetaceans), protected from human knowledge until only a few centuries ago by their extreme isolation in the southwestern Pacific Ocean. Even after humans first began to colonise the New Zealand archipelago in about 1280 AD, most of the native marine mammals remained unfamiliar because they are seldom seen from the shore. This paper describes the huge contrast between the history and biogeography of the tiny fauna of New Zealand's native land mammals versus the richly diverse and little-known assemblage of marine mammals.

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Additional details

Identifiers

URL
hash://md5/b97e49e5a9ed74e34f9c3a1a2dd57503
URN
urn:lsid:zotero.org:groups:5435545:items:VG5N9X6H
DOI
10.3390/d16010045

Biodiversity

Class
Mammalia
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Chiroptera
Phylum
Chordata