Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dk4vv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T17:51:35.725Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Herpetofaunas from the “overburden” (Quaternary) of western Canada

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 September 2013

Christopher N. Jass
Affiliation:
Royal Alberta Museum, 12845 102 Ave., Edmonton, AB, T5N 0M6, Canada. Email: chris.jass@gov.ab.ca
James D. Gardner
Affiliation:
Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology, Box 7500, Drumheller, AB, T0J 0Y0, Canada

Abstract

Quaternary herpetofaunas from eight palaeontological localities in western Canada (British Columbia: Bear Flat; Alberta: Eagle Cave, January Cave, Rat's Nest Cave, Hand/Wintering Hills, Fletcher Site, Stampede Site and Little Fish Lake) are described in detail for the first time. Identifications of taxa from these localities include frogs (Rana sp., Bufo sp., and Anura indet.), salamanders (cf. Ambystoma sp.), and snakes (cf. Thamnophis sp. and cf. Pituophis sp.). Preglacial and postglacial herpetofaunas are distinctly separated by a boundary resulting from the advance and retreat of glacial ice across northern North America. The taxonomic records presented here represent a conservative, morphology-based approach to identification that resulted in less taxonomic resolution than is commonly found in literature on Quaternary herpetofaunas. Nonetheless, the resultant data set was useful for establishing a framework that is indicative of biogeographic stability in Quaternary reptiles and amphibians of western Canada. We hypothesise that the observed stability may be related to evolutionary adaptations (e.g. cold-tolerance) in specific lineages.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Society of Edinburgh 2013 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

8. References

Al-Suwaidi, M., Ward, B. C., Wilson, M. C., Hebda, R. J., Nagorsen, D. W., Marshall, D., Ghaleb, B., Wigen, R. J. & Enkin, R. J. 2006. Late Wisconsinan Port Eliza Cave deposits and their implications for human coastal migration, Vancouver Island, Canada. Geoarchaeology 21 (4), 307–32.Google Scholar
Auffenberg, W. 1963. The fossil snakes of Florida. Tulane Studies in Zoology 10, 131216.Google Scholar
Bayrock, L. A. 1964. Fossil Scaphiopus and Bufo in Alberta. Journal of Paleontology 38, 1111–12.Google Scholar
Beaudoin, A. B. 1998. Bison, birds, and bulrushes: Early Holocene macroremains at the Fletcher site (DjOw-1), Alberta, and implications for plains landscape and climate. Geological Society of America, Abstracts with Programs 30 (7), A168.Google Scholar
Beaudoin, A. B. & Lemmen, D. S. 2000. Late Quaternary history and geoarchaeology of southeastern Alberta and southwestern Saskatchewan. GeoCanada 2000 – The Millennium Geoscience Summit, Field Trip Guidebook 3. 55 pp.Google Scholar
Bell, C. J., Head, J. J. & Mead, J. I. 2004. Synopsis of the herpetofauna from Porcupine Cave. In Barnosky, A. D. (ed) Biodiversity Response to Climate Change in the Middle Pleistocene: The Porcupine Cave Fauna from Colorado, 117–26. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Bell, C. J., Gauthier, J. A. & Bever, G. S. 2010. Covert biases, circularity, and apomorphies: a critical look at the North American Quaternary Herpetofaunal Stability Hypothesis. Quaternary International 217 (1–2), 3036.Google Scholar
Bever, G. S. 2005. Variation in the ilium of North American Bufo (Lissamphibia: Anura) and its implications for species-level identification of fragmentary anuran fossils. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 25 (3), 548–60.Google Scholar
Boardman, G. S. & Schubert, B. W. 2011. First Mio-Pliocene salamander fauna from the southern Appalachians. Palaeontologia Electronica 14 (2), 16A, 119.Google Scholar
Bonaparte, C. L. 1840. Amphibia Europaea ad systema nostrum vertebratorum ordinata auctore, 172. Torino: Typographia regia.Google Scholar
Brattstrom, B. H. 1953. Records of Pleistocene reptiles and amphibians from Florida. Quarterly Journal of the Florida Academy of Sciences 16, 243–48.Google Scholar
Brattstrom, B. H. 1967. A succession of Pliocene and Pleistocene snake faunas from the High Plains of the United States. Copeia 1967, 188202.Google Scholar
Burns, J. A. 1984. Late Quaternary palaeoecology and zoogeography of southwestern Alberta: vertebrate and palynological evidence from two Rocky Mountain caves. Unpublished PhD Dissertation, University of Toronto, Canada.Google Scholar
Burns, J. A. 1989. Fossil vertebrates from Rats Nest Cave, Alberta. Canadian Caver 89, 41–3.Google Scholar
Burns, J. A. 1991. Mid-Wisconsinan vertebrates and their environment from January Cave, Alberta, Canada. Quaternary Research 35 (1), 130–43.Google Scholar
Burns, J. A. 1996. Vertebrate paleontology and the alleged ice-free corridor: the meat of the matter. Quaternary International 217 (1–2), 3742.Google Scholar
Burns, J. A. & McGillivray, W. B. 1989. A new prairie dog, Cynomys churcherii, from the Late Pleistocene of southern Alberta. Canadian Journal of Zoology 67 (11), 2633–9.Google Scholar
Carlton, S. 1982. Ancient bones near Sarnia excite experts. London Free Press, August 23, A5.Google Scholar
Churcher, C. S., Pilny, J. J. & Morgan, A. V. 1990. Late Pleistocene vertebrate, plant and insect remains from the Innerkip Site, southwestern Ontario. Géographie physique et Quaternaire 44 (3), 299308.Google Scholar
Churcher, C. S. & Dods, R. R. 1979. Ochotona and other vertebrates of possible Illinoian age from Kelso Cave, Halton County, Ontario. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 16 (8), 1613–20.Google Scholar
Churcher, C. S. & Fenton, M. B. 1968. Vertebrate remains from the Dickson Limestone quarry, Halton County, Ontario, Canada. National Speleological Society Bulletin 30, 1116.Google Scholar
Churcher, C. S. & Karrow, P. F. 2008. The Hamilton Bar Fauna: evidence for a Hypsithermal age. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 45 (12), 1487–500.Google Scholar
Churcher, C. S. & Peterson, R. L. 1982. Chronologic and environmental implications of a new genus of fossil deer from late Wisconsinan deposits at Toronto, Canada. Quaternary Research 18, 184–93.Google Scholar
Cook, F. R. 1977. A guide to the amphibians and reptiles of Saskatchewan. Saskatchewan Museum of Natural History Popular Series 13, 140.Google Scholar
Cook, F. R. 1984. Introduction to Canadian amphibians and reptiles. Ottawa: National Museums of Canada. 200 pp.Google Scholar
Conant, R. 1975. A field guide to reptiles and amphibians of eastern and central North America, second edition. The Peterson Field Guide Series 12. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company. 429 pp.Google Scholar
Cope, E. D. 1895. On some new North American snakes, Natrix compressicauda taeniata subsp. nov. The American Naturalist 29, 676–80.Google Scholar
Driver, J. C. 1988. Late Pleistocene and Holocene vertebrates and palaeoenvironments from Charlie Lake Cave, northeast British Columbia. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 25 (10), 1545–53.Google Scholar
Duméril, A. M. C. 1806. Zoologie analytique, ou méthode naturelle de classification des animaux, rendue plus facile a l'aide de tableaux synoptiques. Paris: Allais Libraire. 344 pp.Google Scholar
Dyke, A. S. 2005. Late Quaternary vegetation history of northern North America based on pollen, macrofossil, and faunal remains. Géographie physique et Quaternaire 59 (2–3), 211–62.Google Scholar
Estes, R. 1981. Gymnophiona, Caudata. In Wellnhofer, P. (ed.) Encyclopedia of Paleoherpetology, Part 2, 1115. Stuttgart: Gustav Fischer Verlag.Google Scholar
Evans, S. E. & Milner, A. R. 1996. A metamorphosed salamander from the early Cretaceous of Las Hoyas, Spain. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, London B 351 (1340), 627–46.Google Scholar
Fay, L. P. 1984. Mid-Wisconsinan and mid-Holocene herpetofaunas of eastern North America: a study in minimal contrasts. In Genoways, H. H. & Dawson, M. R. (eds) Contributions in Quaternary Vertebrate Paleontology: A Volume in Memorial to John E. Guilday. Carnegie Museum of Natural History Special Publication 8, 1419. Pittsburgh: Carnegie Museum of Natural History.Google Scholar
Fisher, C., Joynt, A. & Brooks, R. J. 2007. Reptiles and amphibians of Canada. Edmonton: Lone Pine Press. 208 pp.Google Scholar
Fitzinger, L. 1843. Systema reptilium. Wien: Braumüller et Seidel. 106 pp.Google Scholar
Forbis, R. G. 1968. Fletcher: a Paleo-Indian site in Alberta. American Antiquity 33, 110.Google Scholar
Gardner, J. D., Roček, Z., Přikryl, T., Eaton, J. G., Blob, R. W. & Sankey, J. 2010. Comparative morphology of the ilium of anurans and urodeles (Lissamphibia) and a re-assessment of the anuran affinities of Nezpercius dodsoni Blob et al., 2001. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 30 (6), 1684–96.Google Scholar
Grantham, R. G. & Kozera-Gillis, K. A. 1992. The East Milford mastodon dig progress report to May 1, 1992. Nova Scotia Museum interim report, Halifax.Google Scholar
Gray, J. E. 1825. A synopsis of the genera of reptiles and Amphibia, with a description of some new species. Annals of Philosophy, Series 2 10, 193217.Google Scholar
Gray, J. E. 1850. Catalogue of the specimens of Amphibia in the collection of the British Museum. Part II. Batrachia Gradientia, etc. London: Spottiswoodes and Shaw. 72 pp.Google Scholar
Gregory, P. T. & Gregory, L. A. 1998. Amphibians and reptiles. In Smith, I. M. & Scudder, G. G. E. (eds) Assessment of species diversity in the Montane Cordillera Ecozone. http://www.naturewatch.ca/eman/reports/publications/99_montane/herps/herps04.html, unpaginated. Burlington: Ecological Monitoring and Assessment Network.Google Scholar
Gryba, E. M. 1975. The Stampede Site DjOn-26: a deeply stratified multi-component site in the Cypress Hills Provincial Park of Alberta, Report on file, Archaeological Survey of Alberta. 186 pp.Google Scholar
Haeckel, E. 1866. Generelle morphologie der organismen: allgemeine grundzüge der organischen formen-wissenschaft, mechanisch begründet durch die von C. Darwin reformirte cecendenz-theorie, Vol. 2. Berlin: Georg Reimer. 462 pp.Google Scholar
Harington, C. R. 2003a. Annotated bibliography of Quaternary vertebrates of northern North America – with radiocarbon dates Toronto: University of Toronto Press. 539 pp.Google Scholar
Harington, C. R. 2003b. Quaternary vertebrates of Québec: a summary. Géographie physique et Quaternaire 57 (1), 8594.Google Scholar
Harris, S. A. 1985. Evidence for the nature of the early Holocene climate and paleogeography, High Plains, Alberta, Canada. Arctic and Alpine Research 17 (1), 4967.Google Scholar
Hebda, R. J., Burns, J. A., Geertsema, M. & Jull, A. J. T. 2008. AMS-dated late Pleistocene taiga vole (Rodentia: Microtus xanthognathus) from northeast British Columbia, Canada: a cautionary lesson in chronology. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 45 (5), 611–8.Google Scholar
Hodge, R. P. 1976. Amphibians & reptiles in Alaska, the Yukon and Northwest Territories. Anchorage: Alaska Northwest Publishing Company. 89 pp.Google Scholar
Holbrook, J. E. 1842. North American herpetology; or, a description of the reptiles inhabiting the United States, 4. Philadelphia: J. Dobson. 138 pp.Google Scholar
Holman, J. A. 1975. Neotenic tiger salamander remains. In Wendorf, F. & Hester, J. J. (eds) Late Pleistocene environments of the southern High Plains. Publication of the Fort Burgwin Research Center 9, 193195.Google Scholar
Holman, J. A. 1995. Pleistocene amphibians and reptiles in North America. New York: Oxford University Press. 243 pp.Google Scholar
Holman, J. A. 2000. Fossil snakes of North America: origin, evolution, distribution, paleoecology. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. 357 pp.Google Scholar
Holman, J. A. 2003. Fossil frogs and toads of North America. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. 246 pp.Google Scholar
Holman, J. A. 2006. Fossil salamanders of North America. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. 232 pp.Google Scholar
Holman, J. A., Harington, C. R. & Mott, R. J. 1997. Skeleton of a leopard frog (Rana pipiens) from Champlain Sea deposits (ca. 10,000 BP) near Eardley, Quebec. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 34 (8), 1150–55.Google Scholar
Holman, J. A. & Clouthier, S. G. 1995. Pleistocene herpetofaunal remains from the East Milford mastodon site (ca. 70 000–80 000 BP), Halifax County, Nova Scotia. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 32 (2), 210–15.Google Scholar
Jass, C. N., Burns, J. A. & Milot, P. J. 2011. Description of fossil muskoxen and relative abundance of Pleistocene megafauna in central Alberta. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 48 (5), 793800.Google Scholar
Khan, E. 1970. Biostratigraphy and paleontology of a Sangamon deposit at Fort Qu'Appelle, Saskatchewan. National Museums of Canada, Publications in Palaeontology 5, 182.Google Scholar
LaDuke, T. C. 1991. The fossil snakes of Pit 91, Rancho La Brea, California. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Contributions in Science 424, 128.Google Scholar
Lammers, G. E. & Wrigley, R. E. 1984. The history of Manitoba's animals. In Teller, J. T. (ed.) Natural heritage of Manitoba: legacy of the Ice Age, 127–59. Winnipeg: Manitoba Museum of Man and Nature.Google Scholar
LaSalle, P. 1984. Geological setting and preliminary faunal report for the St.-Elzéar Cave, Quebec, Canada. In Genoways, H. H. & Dawson, M. R. (eds) Contributions in Quaternary Vertebrate Paleontology: A Volume in Memorial to John E. Guilday. Carnegie Museum of Natural History Special Publication 8, 332–46. Pittsburg: Carnegie Museum of Natural History.Google Scholar
LaSalle, P. & Guilday, J. E. 1980. Caverne de St-Elzéar-de-Bonaventure. Ministère de l'Énergie et des Ressources, Québec DPV-750, 131.Google Scholar
Laurenti, J. N. 1768. Synopsin Reptilium Emendatum cum Experimentis Circa Venena et Antidota Reptilium Austriacorum. Vienna: Joan. Thom. Nob. de Trattnern. 214 pp.Google Scholar
Lauriol, B., Deschamps, E., Carrier, L., Grimm, W., Morlan, R. & Talon, B. 2003. Cave infill and associated biotic remains as indicators of Holocene environment in Gatineau Park (Quebec, Canada). Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 40 (6), 789803.Google Scholar
Lewin, V. 1963. The herpetofauna of southeastern Alberta. The Canadian Field-Naturalist 77, 203–14.Google Scholar
Linnaeus, C. 1758. Systema naturae: per regna tria naturae: secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis, 10th Ed.Halae Magdeburgicae: Typis et Sumtibus Io. Iac. Curt. 824 pp.Google Scholar
Matsuda, B. M., Green, D. M. & Gregory, P. T. 2006. The amphibians and reptiles of British Columbia. Royal BC Museum Handbook. Victoria: Royal British Columbia Museum. 288 pp.Google Scholar
Mead, J. I. & Grady, F. 1996. Ochotona (Lagomorpha) from late Quaternary cave deposits in eastern North America. Quaternary Research 45 (1), 93101.Google Scholar
Meyer, D. A., Blakey, J. & Roe, J. 2009. Stampede Site (DjOn-26) archaeological excavations 2008 phase 2 investigations final report. Report on file, Archaeological Survey of Alberta. 169 pp.Google Scholar
Munyikwa, K., Feathers, J. K., Rittenour, T. M. & Shrimpton, H. K. 2011. Constraining the Late Wisconsinan retreat of the Laurentide ice sheet from western Canada using luminescence ages from postglacial Aeolian dunes. Quaternary Geochronology 6 (3–4), 407–22.Google Scholar
Naylor, B. G. 1978. The systematics of fossil and Recent salamanders (Amphibia: Caudata), with special reference to the vertebral column and trunk musculature. PhD Dissertation, University of Alberta, Edmonton.Google Scholar
Nero, R. W. & McCorquodale, B. A. 1958. Report of an excavation at the Oxbow Dam site. Blue Jay 16, 8290.Google Scholar
Noble, B. G. 1931. The biology of the Amphibia. New York: McGraw-Hill. 577 pp.Google Scholar
Nopsca, F. 1923. Die familien der Reptilien. Fortschritte der Geologie und Paleontologie 2, 1210.Google Scholar
Oppel, M. 1811. Die ordnungen, familien und gattungen der reptilien als prodrom einer naturgeschichte derselben. München: J. Lindauer. 86 pp.Google Scholar
Parmley, D. 1986. Herpetofauna of the Rancholabrean Schulze Cave local fauna of Texas. Journal of Herpetology 20 (1), 110.Google Scholar
Pearce, T. A., Olori, J. C. & Kemezis, K. W. 2010. Land snails from St. Elzear Cave, Gaspé Peninsula, Quebec: antiquity of Cepaea hortensis in North America. Annals of the Carnegie Museum 79 (1), 6578.Google Scholar
Petranka, J. W. 1998. Salamanders of the United States and Canada. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press. 587 pp.Google Scholar
Pilny, J. J. & Morgan, A. V. 1987. Paleoentomology and paleoecology of a possible Sangamonian site near Innerkip, Ontario. Quaternary Research 28, 157–74.Google Scholar
Quigg, J. M. 1976. A note on the Fletcher Site. Archaeological Survey of Alberta Occasional Paper 1, 108–09.Google Scholar
Rafinesque, C. S. 1815. Analyse de la nature ou Tableau de l'Univers et des corps organises. Palermo: Jean Barravecchia. 224 pp.Google Scholar
Ralrick, P. E. 2007. Taphonomic description and interpretation of a multi-taxic bonebed at Little Fish Lake, Alberta, Canada. Unpublished MS Thesis, University of Calgary.Google Scholar
Rogers, K. L. 1985. Faculative metamorphosis in a series of high altitude fossil populations of Ambystoma tigrinum (Irvingtonian: Alamosa County, Colorado). Copeia 1985, 926–32.Google Scholar
Russell, A. P. & Bauer, A. M. 2000. The amphibians and reptiles of Alberta: a field guide and primer of boreal herpetology. Calgary: University of Calgary Press. 279 pp.Google Scholar
Sanchiz, B. 1998. Salientia. In Wellnhofer, P. (ed) Encyclopedia of Paleoherpetology, Part 4, 1275. München: Verlag Dr. Friedrich Pfeil.Google Scholar
Scopoli, G. A. 1777. Introductio ad historiam naturalem, sistens genera lapidium, planatarum, et animalium: hactenus detecta, caracteribus essentialibus donata, in tribus divisia, subinde ad leges naturae. Prague: Apud Wolfgangum Gerle. 506 pp.Google Scholar
Shapiro, B., Drummond, A. J., Rambaut, A., Wilson, M. C., Matheus, P. E., Sher, A. V., Pybus, O. G., Gilbert, M. T. P., Barnes, I., Binladen, J., Willerslev, E., Hansen, A. J., Baryshnikov, G. F., Burns, J. A., Davydov, S., Driver, J. C., Froese, D. G., Harington, C. R., Keddie, G., Kosintsev, P., Kunz, M. L., Martin, L. D., Stephenson, R. O., Storer, J., Tedford, R., Zimov, S. & Cooper, A. 2004. Rise and fall of the Beringian Steppe bison. Science 306 (5701), 1561–65.Google Scholar
Stalker, A. M., Churcher, C. S. & Hill, R. S. 1982. Ice age deposits and animals from the southwestern part of the Great Plains of Canada. Geological Survey of Canada, Surveys and Mapping Branch Miscellaneous Report 31. Wall chart.Google Scholar
Stebbins, R. C. 1985. A field guide to western reptiles and amphibians, second edition. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. 336 pp.Google Scholar
Storer, J. E. 2006. Ice age biochronology in eastern Beringia. Canadian Palaeobiology 12, 517.Google Scholar
Tihen, J. A. 1942. A colony of fossil neotenic Ambystoma tigrinum. University of Kansas Science Bulletin 28, 189–98.Google Scholar
Tihen, J. A. 1958. Comments on the osteology and phylogeny of ambystomatid salamanders. Florida State Museum Bulletin 3, 150.Google Scholar
Trueb, L. 1973. Bones, frogs and evolution. In Vial, J. L. (ed.) Evolutionary biology of the anurans: contemporary research on major problems, 65132. Columbia: University of Missouri Press.Google Scholar
Tschudi, J. J. 1838. Classification der Batrachier, mit Berucksichtigung der fossilen Thiere dieser Abtheilung der Reptilien. Neuchâtel: Petitpierre. 44 pp.Google Scholar
Vickers, J. R. & Beaudoin, A. B. 1989. A limiting AMS date for the Cody Complex occupation at the Fletcher Site, Alberta, Canada. Plains Anthropologist 34 (1), 261–64.Google Scholar
Yonge, C. J. 1991. Studies at Rats Nest Cave: potential for an underground laboratory in the Canadian Rocky Mountains. Cave Science 18 (3), 119–29.Google Scholar
Young, R. R., Burns, J. A., Smith, D. G., Arnold, L. D. & Rains, R. B. 1994. A single, late Wisconsin, Laurentide glaciation, Edmonton area and southwestern Alberta. Geology 22, 683–86.Google Scholar
Young, R. R., Burns, J. A., Rains, R. B. & Schowalter, D. B. 1999. Late Pleistocene glacial geomorphology and environment of the Hand Hills region and southern Alberta, related to Middle Wisconsin fossil prairie dog sites. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 36 (9), 1567–81.Google Scholar