Tropical Marine Ecology. Daniel M. Alongi

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part of the continental coastline where coral reefs occurred. The centre of origin in the Coral Triangle was completely established only about 10 Ma, but its predecessor had existed in the Tethys Sea between Africa and Eurasia since the early Cretaceous (Briggs 2006).

Schematic illustration of ecoregions of zooxanthellate corals delineated based on known faunal and/or environmental uniformity.

      Source: www.coralsoftheworld.org (accessed 5 January 2021). © Japanese Coral Reef Society.

      The Tethyan fauna that had become isolated to form the Caribbean Province became divided into the West Central American and Antillean Provinces; the late Cretaceous subdivision of the Caribbean Province may have been a response to the formation of a Central American archipelago, and an early Central American isthmus may have formed at that time. The modern, high‐diversity fauna of the Southern Caribbean was largely derived from the Caribbean Province of the Tethys Sea, although as Briggs (2006) points out, some of it came from the Western Pacific across the East Pacific Barrier before the formation of the isthmus. The East Indies fauna was rich and inherited from the Indo‐Mediterranean Province via the Indian Ocean.

      The origin of the great majority of our present species probably took place in the Pliocene and Pleistocene with a large proportion of species richness originating within the two tropical centres. What this means in practical terms is that more than 75% of the Indo‐Pacific reef fish and about 450 species of hermatypic corals were also present in the Coral Triangle.

      Source: Briggs (1974, 2006) and Lomolino et al. (2016). © John Wiley & Sons.

Event Effects
Isolation of Antarctica
Early Eocene (50 Ma)‐full deep‐water separation of South Tasman Rise First indications of global cooling at 50–40 Ma and significant 2°C temperature drops in both the late–middle Eocene and middle–late Eocene boundary. Further isolation of Antarctic marine fauna.
Eocene–Oligocene boundary (37 Ma) Major cooling of both surface and bottom waters by 5°C. Onset of widespread Antarctic glaciation.
Opening of Drake Passage (36–23 Ma) Almost complete isolation of Antarctic marine fauna.
Mid‐Miocene (15 Ma)‐full establishment of Antarctic Circumpolar Current Latitudinal temperature gradient like that of today. Development of Polar Frontal Zone.
Closure of Tethyan Seaway
End of Cretaceous period (75–65 Ma)‐vast circumpolar‐equatorial tropical ocean Major westerly flowing equatorial current system. Some faunal differentiation but no clear high‐diversity loci.
Paleogene (65–23 Ma)‐continuity of the tropical Tethyan Ocean Largely homogenous tropical fauna. Major pulse in coral reef development at the end of Oligocene (23 Ma); marked similarities between western Tethys (Mediterranean) and Caribbean/ Gulf of Mexico.
Early Miocene (20 Ma)‐closure of Tethyan Seaway by northward movement of Africa/Arabia landmass Westerly flowing tropical current drastically curtailed. Mediterranean Sea excluded from reef belt. Caribbean and eastern Pacific regions become progressively isolated marking beginning of the distinction between IWP and Atlantic Caribbean–East Pacific (ACEP) foci. Further development through the Neogene (<20 Ma) sees relative impoverishment of ACEP and enrichment of IWP.
Collision of Australia/New Guinea with Southeast Asia
Beginning of Cenozoic era (65 Ma)‐Australia/New Guinea separated from SE Asia by deep‐water gateway Single tropical Tethyan ocean. No differentiation between Indian and Pacific Oceans.
Paleogene (65–23 Ma)‐progressive closure of Indo‐Pacific gateway; northward subduction of Indian–Australian lithosphere beneath the Sunda–Java–Sulawesi

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