Showing posts with label Caribbean. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Caribbean. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 9, 2025

Meteorites in Cuba? What’s Real and What Isn’t



Remember the asteroid that probably wiped out the dinosaurs? That was an extreme case of a meteorite impact. Today, far smaller pieces of rock from space land all over the planet, and others collected ages ago, sit quietly in museum drawers and private collections. Across Cuba, a small group of dense, dark rocks carry an attractive label: meteorite. For decades they have been treated as fragments of asteroids that landed on the island, even though most were never examined with modern analytic tools. When we finally put them under the microscope, several of these supposed "space rocks" turned out to be something else entirely.


    Before getting to those cool results, it is worth asking: what is a meteorite, and why does it matter? Most meteorites are pieces of asteroids, small bodies that never grew into full planets. A few rare ones come from the Moon or Mars. They are leftovers from the early solar system, frozen records of how dust, rock, metal, and ice first came together 4.5 billion years ago and gave rise to bodies like our own planet. By studying their minerals and chemistry, we learn how planets formed, how they differentiated into cores and mantles, how water and organic molecules moved around, and how often large objects have hit Earth in the past. In other words, meteorites are not just “space souvenirs”, they are physical pages from the early history of our planetary system, with direct relevance to questions about Earth's origins, impact hazards, and even the conditions that probably made life possible.

    With that in mind, it becomes clearer why it matters to know which rocks really came from space and which did not. If a specimen is misidentified, it can mislead the statistics, comparisons, and models that scientists build from it. If it is correctly recognized, even a small fragment can become part of a much bigger scientific story.

    This blog post is about what happened when we went back to test some of those “meteorites” samples, in detail. I will walk through two kinds of stories from our recent work: how several classic Cuban meteorites turned out to be meteor-wrongs, and how a very weathered meteorite from Jamaica, Lucky Hill, could still confirm its extraterrestrial origin under the microscope. Together, they show how old specimens in museums can still change what we think we know. Museum collections are today more alive than ever!

    One of the first objects we revisited was a famous iron lump in the National Museum of Natural Sciences in Madrid, long listed in catalogs as the official “Cuba” meteorite. On paper it sounded convincing: heavy, metallic, and backed by an old story linking it to the island. Under the microscope, however, it behaved like something entirely different. It lacked the nickel-rich alloys and internal patterns we expect from iron meteorites that cooled slowly inside an asteroid. Its chemistry also matched man-made metal far better than any known natural iron from space. In other words, the “Cuba meteorite” is almost certainly not a meteorite at all, but a “meteor-wrong” (a term used for rocks that resemble them) that sat in the meteorite record for more than a century before being really tested.

    That result pushed us to look more systematically at the broader set of suspected meteorites from Cuba. The island's geology is remarkably varied, with ultramafic rocks, basalts, laterites, iron crusts, and industrial ferrosilicon slags all occur in a country with a long mining and metallurgical history. It is the perfect recipe for confusion. Dense, dark, magnetic rocks turn up in fields, quarries, riverbeds, construction sites, and even archaeological digs. Some end up in museum drawers. Many others are passed from hand to hand with a confident “meteorite” label.

    When we compiled and examined a series of these celebrated specimens, most turned out to be very down to earth. Some were ordinary basalts. Others were iron-rich concretions formed in soils. Several were industrial slags from smelting or foundry work, full of bubbles and strange textures that make them look extraterrestrial at first glance. Their magnetism and odd shapes make them ideal candidates to fool both the public and older scientific catalogs. Yet simple tests, such as checking density, looking for the minerals that really belong in meteorites, and using standard tools like X-ray diffraction and scanning electron microscopy (SEM), were enough to show that many of these supposed specimens never fell from space at all.

    This is one of the quiet surprises of working with old collections. A specimen collected in the nineteenth century, mislabeled and slowly dusting in a drawer, can still become new data once you point the right instruments at it. Museum shelves turn into laboratories, and long accepted stories about certain objects can change in a matter of hours once the measurements are in. Our work on the Cuban meteor-wrongs and on the old catalogs is a reminder that museums are not static storage rooms. Instead, they are active archives of planetary material, where forgotten samples can still change what we think we know.

    Not everything we studied ended up being a meteor-wrong, though. The Caribbean does have genuine meteorites, and one of the most intriguing is Lucky Hill, found in Jamaica in 1885. By the time we see it today, Lucky Hill barely looks like a meteorite. The surviving pieces are small and heavily rusted, and in some collections, they are little more than reddish powder in small vials. For decades, that weathering made it hard to say much beyond “yes, it probably came from space.”

    In our most recent work, we focused on one of the best-preserved Lucky Hill fragments, kept at the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C. Using a scanning electron microscope with an X-ray detector, essentially a very powerful magnifying glass that also tells you what each tiny grain is made of, we were able to pick out what remains of the original metal. Most of the iron has been converted into rust minerals, but small pockets of nickel-bearing alloy still survive, together with tiny crystals of schreibersite, a phosphorus rich iron nickel mineral that is typical of iron meteorites. At the same time, we see minerals such as akageneite that form when chloride rich moisture attacks iron, exactly what you would expect for an object exposed for a long time in a warm, probably coastal environment.

    From Cuba to Jamaica, the same approach gives two very different answers. In Cuba, several well-known "meteorites" dissolve into a mixture of basalts, concretions, and industrial slag once you look closely enough. In Jamaica, a heavily rusted lump that barely looks meteoritic at first sight turns out, under the microscope, to preserve just enough of its original structure to confirm that it really is a fragment of an iron body from space. In both cases we move from rusted pebbles, a few centimeters across, to questions about how metal bodies formed and cooled in the early solar system. That jump, from micrometers under the electron beam to millions of kilometers across the asteroid belt, is part of the quiet awe behind this work.

Lucky Hill meteorite scattered fragments stored at the British Museum, London, UK. Courtesy and photograph of Natasha Vasiliki Almeida (BNHM). 

    All this also says a lot about museums and old collections. Many of the specimens we studied were collected in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, when analytic tools were limited and labels were sometimes vague. Tropical climates, salty air, and decades in storage have taken their toll. Re-examining this material with modern methods is not just an academic exercise; it tells curators which objects need better conservation, which labels should be rewritten, and which specimens are truly reliable for future research. It also shows why careful labeling and proper storage matter. A rock that is recorded with its place and date of collection, and preserved under decent conditions, can still be reanalyzed a century later and yield new information. Without that chain of care, the scientific value is lost.

    For anyone who has ever picked up a heavy, dark rock and wondered whether it came from space, the message is simple: curiosity is essential, but the evidence decides. Magnets and good stories are a starting point, not a final verdict. Some candidates will prove to be genuine messengers from the asteroid belt; many will be meteor-wrongs with interesting but entirely terrestrial histories. In both cases, careful observation and a bit of geo-chemistry are what turn guesses into knowledge, and what keep the process of scientific discovery very much alive and connected to the wider public that ultimately supports and benefits from it.

 


Further reading


Ceballos-Izquierdo, Y., Orihuela, J., Gonçalves, G., et al. (2021). Meteorite and bright fireball records from Cuba. Mineralia Slovaca, 53(2), 131–145. 

Ceballos-Izquierdo, Y., Nieto Codina, A., & Orihuela, J. (2024). From meteorite to meteor-wrong: Investigating a controversial specimen from Cuba. Revista Mexicana de Ciencias Geológicas, 41(1), 1–10. 

From meteorite to meteor-wrong …

Ceballos-Izquierdo, Y., Orihuela, J., & Borges-Sellén, C. R. (2024). Checklist of Cuban meteor-wrongs. Revista de la Sociedad Geológica de España, 37(1), 32–44. 

Ceballos-Izquierdo, Y., Gonçalves Silva, G., & Orihuela, J. (2025). Rediscovering Lucky Hill: SEM-EDS insights into the composition and weathering of a Jamaican meteorite. Geologia USP Série Científica, 25(4), 89–98. Here...

Friday, January 25, 2019

New Book: Cuba, Archaeology and Historical Legacy

A new book on Cuban archaeology was presented this past January 25, in the old city of La Habana, Cuba. The event was sponsored by the city of Havana historian's office, the Montane Anthropological Museum and the Cultural Patrimony Council. The title of the work is "Cuba: Arqueología y Legacía Histórica" (Polymita).



This is an important contribution, which in the constellation of other recent works - which includes several important articles and full-length treaties on several themes – gathers some of the most significant minds of Cuban archaeology of the XX and XXI centuries.


The book includes a series of diverse articles touching upon current issues and problematica in the fields of archaeological and historical research in Cuba. There are sections on the interpretation of aboriginal or prehistoric burial practices, use of fauna, and applications of theoretical archaeology; plus, the interpretation of the chronicles penned by conquistadores during the first decades of the colonization. Moreover, it includes an array of classic works on physical anthropology, toolkits and technological usage of wood and mollusks. The contributions provided both by the young and the older, though distinguished, generations of archaeologists. Among them, some of the most renown names in Cuban and Caribbean archaeology.




Within the attendees were the city historians Eusebio Leal Spengler (La Habana) and Ercilio Vento Canosa (Matanzas), the conservator of the city of Matanzas, Leonel Perez Orozco, among other prominent Cuban archaeologists. Presenting were Jorge Garcell of the council of Cultural Patrimony and the photographer - wind beneath the wings of this publication- Julio Larramendi.

Please, join us in congratulating our friends and colleagues, those that made within and outside the covers, for this important contribution.


A complete list of the book’s content is here provided (in Spanish):

PRÓLOGO
José Barreiro

LOS ESTUDIOS SOBRE ARQUEOLOGÍA ABORIGEN EN CUBA: TEORÍAS Y APRECIACIONES
Armando Rangel Rivero
LAS COMUNIDADES ABORÍGENES DE CUBA. CENSO 2013
José Jiménez Santander, Liamne Torres La Paz, Dany Morales Valdés y Lisandra Jiménez Ortega

CRÓNICAS Y CRONISTAS DE INDIAS OCCIDENTALES
Ulises M. González Herrera

VIDA COTIDIANA Y ORGANIZACIÓN SOCIAL DE LAS COMUNIDADES ABORÍGENES DE CUBA
Lillián J. Moreira de Lima

POBLACIÓN ABORIGEN PRECOLOMBINA. DESCRIPCIÓN DE LAS CARACTERÍSTICAS CRANEALES Y LA ESTATURA
Manuel F. Rivero de la Calle

LA ALIMENTACIÓN DE LOS ABORÍGENES DE CUBA
Roberto Rodríguez Suárez y Yadira Chinique de Armas

EL ARTE COMO EXPRESIÓN SOCIAL DE LOS ABORÍGENES DE CUBA
Lourdes Sarah Domínguez González

ANIMALES EN EL ARTE ABORIGEN
Carlos Arredondo Antúnez y Rafael Borroto-Páez
PINTURAS Y GRABADOS RUPESTRES EN EL ARCHIPIÉLAGO CUBANO
Divaldo A. Gutiérrez Calvache y José B. González Tendero

MEDICINA DE LOS ABORÍGENES DE CUBA
Enrique Beldarraín Chaple

LOS BATEYES ABORÍGENES: JUEGO Y RITO EN EL ESPACIO COMUNAL
Daniel Torres Etayo

COSTUMBRES FUNERARIAS: LA MUERTE, EL ESPACIO Y EL TRATAMIENTO DEL CADÁVER EN LAS COMUNIDADES ORIGINARIAS DE CUBA
Jorge Fernando Garcell Domínguez

LOS ABORÍGENES Y EL USO DE LOS MOLUSCOS
Alina Lomba Garmendia y Daniel Torres Etayo

LAS INDUSTRIAS LÍTICAS DE LAS SOCIEDADES ABORÍGENES EN CUBA
Gerardo Izquierdo Díaz

LAS MADERAS EN LOS OBJETOS ABORÍGENES CUBANOS
Raquel Carreras Rivery
LA INDUSTRIA DE LA MADERA DE LOS ABORÍGENES DE CUBA
Gabino La Rosa Corzo

EL ÁREA ARQUEOLÓGICA LOS BUCHILLONES: ZONA EXCEPCIONAL PARA EL CARIBE
Adrián García Lebroc y Jorge Calvera Rosés

EL CHORRO DE MAÍTA
Roberto Valcárcel Rojas

EL LEGADO ARUACO EN EL ESPAÑOL CUBANO
Sergio Valdés Bernal

DESCENDIENTES DE LOS ABORÍGENES CUBANOS
Manuel F. Rivero de la Calle

LA HUELLA ABORIGEN EN EL PATRIMONIO GENÉTICO DE LA NACIÓN CUBANA
Beatriz Marcheco Teruel

ENTREVISTA A ALEJANDRO HARTMAN, HISTORIADOR DE BARACOA Y DIRECTOR DEL MUSEO MATACHÍN

 

Photographs published here are courtesy of personnel of the Oficina del Historiador de La Habana. Most special thanks to Lisette Roura Alvarez (C).

Monday, December 11, 2017

Nesophontes: The Discovery of the first Greater Antillean Island Slayer

Nesophontes are a small group of shrew-like mammals with a very primitive past that reaches as far back as the Cretaceous - when the dinosaurs roamed this planet. We owe its discovery to Harold H. Anthony, one of the most proliferous pioneers of Caribbean vertebrate paleontology.

Original illustration of the type description of Nesophontes edithae H. E. Anthony 1916

The genus Nesophontes is today grouped within the Eulipotyphla order. This is a group of basal placental mammals that are today considered ancestrally associated to Solenodon and other North American extinct shrew-like micromammals, but surprisingly, not to the African tenrecs.  They were small, likely venomous, nocturnal and semi-fossorial mammals endemic to the Great Antilles, where they had a widespread distribution, with the interesting exception of The Bahamas and Jamaica.

Solenodon paradoxus from Hispaniola at the Mammalogy collection of the AMNH

By 1915, H. E. Anthony had a hint of the existence of Nesophontes from fossils found in the island of Puerto Rico. Dr. Franz Boas, the German-American father of modern anthropology, had sent material from his expedition in Puerto Rico to the American Museum of Natural History in New York City (AMNH) that same year. Anthony worked as a paleontologist there, and from Boas's material he extracted the first incomplete specimens of Nesophontes. But these were not enough to describe a new species.

Left: Franz Boas, German American Anthropologist, circa 1916. Right: Harold H. Anthony, circa 1930s.

In fact, it was Dr. Anthony's wife, Edith I. Anthony, who on July 19, 1916, discovered the first undoubtable evidence of the existence of this peculiar mammal in Cueva Clara, near Morovis, Puerto Rico. Anthony, in honor of its wife, named the type species Nesophontes edithae.

Type specimen of Nesophontes edithae AMNH 14174, collected by Mrs. Anthony in 1916

The study of Nesophontes is forever tied to the efforts of Anthony, the discovery of his wife and the material sent by Franz Boas. Gerritt S. Miller and Glover M. Allen, in addition, played a role too in the further discovery and study of these peculiar extinct mammals. In 1919, Anthony described a new species, Nesophontes longirostris, this time from a cave deposit in Daiquiri, southeastern Cuba.

H. E. Anthony would continue to work for the AMNH until the 1960's as one of the museum's most respected mammalogists, paleontologists, and curators.


Please stay tuned for an upcoming post on Solendon!

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

La Flauta de Arroyo del Palo

Por Osvaldo Jiménez Vázquez
Gabinete de Arqueología, Oficina del Historiador de La Habana, Cuba

Osvaldo Jimenez Vazquez
La Flauta de Arroyo del Palo

El joven flautista había muerto. Junto a su cadáver depositaron, entre lágrimas, su preciado instrumento, una pequeña flauta de hueso. Previamente quebraron el aerófono, para que nadie volviera a tocar aquel bien tan valioso al ejecutante, para que su espíritu, y el de la flauta, coexistieran en paz más allá de la vida terrena. Allí, al abrigo de la solapa descansaría eternamente la fracción material de los compañeros, y en la dimensión espiritual, sus almas continuarían la amistosa relación.

En vida, la flauta había sido una amiga inseparable, compartiendo ceremonias, penas y soledades. Los limitados sonidos de aquel instrumento le llevaban en espíritu a lugares insospechados.

La historia común había comenzado a las orillas de una laguna costera, donde el adolescente cazaba junto a los hombres de la tribu. Esta laguna estaba situada al borde de la actual bahía de Nipe, unos 12 km al noroeste de su aldea. Allí se encontró con el cuerpo exánime de aquella gran ave, el pelícano, al cual pidió con respeto el hueso de una de sus alas. Lo preparó cuidadosamente, con cortes en ambos extremos, la perforación de dos orificios para los dedos y el pulido final. Ya lista, la colocó suavemente entre sus labios y sopló, a la vez que modulaba con los dedos la salida del aire. Entonces, la tenue voz del espíritu que habitaba en ella se expresó a través del sonido musical, fusionándose soplo y sonido en una voz común.

Juntos vivieron muchas aventuras, pues el adolescente nunca se separaba de ella, a veces viajaba colgada a su cuello mediante una cuerda, y otras, descansaba dentro de un bolsillo de piel de jutía. Ella y el eran uno
”.

Esta recreación poética parte de un hecho verídico. En la década de 1960, miembros del grupo de aficionados a la arqueología Mayarí hallaron la flauta junto al cadáver de un adolescente masculino aborigen, en el sitio arqueológico Arroyo del Palo, en el municipio Banes, provincia de Holguín. Este hallazgo se produjo cuando revisaban una oquedad que se abría en la pared del abrigo rocoso, a nivel del suelo. Este descubrimiento fue relevante, ya que los instrumentos musicales son raros en contextos arqueológicos de la Cuba prehispánica. Aerófonos de diversos tipos se han hallado, entre ellos flautas elaboradas de huesos humanos y de roedores. Fabricada a partir de un hueso de ave, solo se conoce el ejemplar de Arroyo del Palo, pieza que se exhibe actualmente en la sala expositiva del Instituto Cubano de Antropología (ICAN), sito en calle Amargura entre Habana y Aguiar, en La Habana Vieja.

El sitio Arroyo del Palo fue habitado por aborígenes recolectores, cazadores y pescadores, artífices de una cerámica de factura simple y que practicaban, además, una agricultura incipiente, incluyendo, quizás, especies de plantas similares a las identificadas en el sitio homologo Canimar Abajo, costa norte de Matanzas. Estas eran, boniato (Ipomoea batatas), yuquilla de ratón (Zamia cf otonis), mate de costa (Canavalia sp.), frijól (Phaseolus sp.), y una planta marantácea indeterminada.

Arroyo del Palo fue habitado, según dos fechados C14, entre los años 1190 y 980 de nuestra era (Tabío y Rey, 1985). Los habitantes de este sitio mantuvieron en algún momento nexos con los aborígenes de la isla de Jamaica, de la cual trajeron un ejemplar de la jutía de Brown (Geocapromys brownii).

Hasta este momento se desconocía la especie que había aportado el hueso para la flauta, por lo cual se realizó un examen de la misma, comparándola con materiales óseos de la colección de referencia del Gabinete de Arqueología (Oficina del Historiador de La Habana) lo cual permitió definir que fue fabricada a partir de la diáfisis de una ulna izquierda de pelicano (Pelecanus spp.). En el hueso se observó la curvatura típica del hueso de esta ave y las cotilas dorsales para la inserción de las plumas secundarias, aún cuando la superficie externa fue rebajada. El rebaje hizo desaparecer, sin embargo, las cotilas ventrales, menos eminentes que las dorsales.

La pieza mide unos 100 mm de largo y 11 mm de diámetro, presentando en la cara posterior dos orificios circulares de 4 mm para los dedos. Alrededor de estos orificios observamos el desgaste producido por los dedos durante la etapa de uso.

Uno de sus extremos esta fracturado, estimándose la longitud original en unos 120 mm. La fractura que presenta esta flauta pudiera ser intencional, con el fin de inutilizar el objeto mágico-religioso cuyo propietario había fallecido. La práctica de inutilizar objetos de los difuntos se conoce en otras culturas aborígenes históricas, por ejemplo, los Calusas del suroeste de la Florida perforaban sus recipientes de concha de Busycon a la muerte del propietario para así matar el espíritu que habitaba en ellos.

Que sepamos, en Las Antillas no se han hallado aerófonos facturados en huesos de aves. Según los arqueólogos Ernesto Tabío y J. M. Guarch, flautas similares se han reportado en sitios aborígenes del sudeste de Virginia, Estados Unidos, asociados a la cultura Woodland, que floreció entre el año 1000 antes de Cristo y el 100 de Cristo. En centro y Sudamérica se conoce del hallazgo de flautas elaboradas a partir de huesos de pelicano (Pelecanus spp.). Estas se encontraron en el sitio Caral, Valle de Supe, en los Andes peruanos, fechado en el tercer milenio antes de Cristo, y en el sitio Sierra (Aguadulce), en Panamá, con cronología entre el año 2 y 222 de Cristo. En este último sitio el hueso utilizado para fabricar la flauta fue un húmero, y, al igual que en Arroyo del Palo, el aerófono estaba asociado a un enterramiento humano. Ninguna de las culturas mencionadas tiene relación con el hombre del sitio Arroyo del Palo, solo hacemos referencia a ellas desde un punto de vista comparativo.

Las flautas acompañaron al hombre antiguo en todo el mundo, las más antiguas proceden del Paleolítico Superior Temprano (Aurignacience) de Francia y Alemania. Aquellas que se sostienen verticalmente, como la de Arroyo del Palo, representan las formas más tempranas. En las culturas más antiguas, estos instrumentos musicales se construían preferentemente de huesos de animales, específicamente de las alas de aves, que resultan muy adecuados para estos fines, porque son ahuecados, delgados y fuertes, lo que posibilitaba perforarlos sin grandes riesgos de fractura. En el Viejo Mundo, comúnmente se usaron para estos fines los huesos de buitres (Gyps fulvusAegypius monachus).



Tuesday, January 31, 2017

The Bats of Matanzas

The Province of Matanzas, in western Cuba, is known for the wonderful white sands of Varadero Beach, its turquoise waters, the amazing Bellamar caves, and the Zapata Swamp, the largest "humedal" in all the Caribbean. What Matanzas is not known for, however, is for its richness in bat species. Of the 28 living species recorded for the Cuban archipelago, 26 inhabit the province of Matanzas, representing the six bat families that inhabit Cuba (1).


Leach's Single-Leaf nosed bat (Monophyllus redmani).
This species feeds mostly on pollen and plays a key role in pollination of plants.

A reason for the high diversity of bats in Matanzas may be that Cuba does not possess major geographical barriers such as very tall mountains or deserts. Instead, the island is characterized by its low-lying landscape, with hills that rarely surpass 300 m in height. As a result, bat distribution in Cuba is highly homogeneous. Similar numbers of species are found in all other of Cuba's 15 provinces. This could be a reflection of the area's most recent geological history or less collecting efforts in the rest of Cuba.

The Cuban Archipelago (GoogleEarth). 

Bats are amazing creatures, with amazing adaptations. With their skin-webbed wings, velvety fur, and sharp teeth, bats have probably cruised the Cuban skies in search of food and shelter for a least 33 million years (Eocene-Oligocene), when the island emerged and became available for colonization; although, unfortunately, we only have bat fossils from the last 20 thousand years (2).

Waterhouse's Leaf-nosed bat (Macrotus waterhousei). 

The biological diversity and uniqueness of Cuba is a result of the island’s intricate geological history and its long isolation from the mainland. Over 60% of the Cuban landscape is karstic, and nearly 80 % if the submerged platform is counted, indicating a high potential in the availability of caves, crucial shelters that allow high species richness. In fact, this has been correlated by bat researchers (Brunett and Medellin, 2001). Of the 28 known Cuban bats, 15 are strict cave -dwellers, with most others using caves opportunistically (1).

Insectivorous Waterhouse's Leaf-nosed bat (Macrotus waterhousei) in flight

Here is where Matanzas shines. Matanzas harbors today the most extensive subaerial karst region of the entire Cuban archipelago, a potentially very cave-rich region ~65,500 km² wide. Probably, no other province in Cuba has more caves available for bat roosting than Matanzas today. Moreover, this was more strikingly so 10,000 years ago, when the Gulf of Batabanó, south of the western half of Cuba, had the largest potential in the availability of caves for bat roosting anywhere in the Cuban archipelago, competing in the Caribbean only with the Bahama bank. Once the ice of the last glacial maximum melted with the warmer temperatures of the Holocene epoch, sea level rose and inundated most of the Cuban ancient karst plains, drowning about ~13,300 km² of latent cave-rich territory (3), essential for bat life in the island, and likely culling the territory of a few species. Many have postulated this as the reason for the disappearance of several bat species.

Jamaican Fruit-eating bat Artibeus jamaicensis  roosting on
the calcarenite limestone of Varadero's Ambrosio Cave. 

Matanzas has played an important role in the study of Cuban bats since at least the XIX century. Four of Cuba's bats Pteronotus parnelli, Pteronotus quadridens, Phyllonycteris poeyi and Tadarida brasiliensis (muscula), were collected and described for the first time from Matanzas, near the coffee plantation Fundador de Canímar. This feat is the work of the German naturalist, Johannes Gundlach.

Sooty Moustached-bat Pteronotus quadridens

Gundlach stopped in Cuba on his way to South America and fell in love with the island. I venture to say, he fell in love with Matanzas as well, for he took residence there for nearly the rest of his life. He settled in the lush region near the Canímar River, where he stayed with the Booth family who had plantations there. Gundlach roamed the countryside, especially the Zapata Swamp, and the Canímar River gorge where he observed and collected specimens of mollusks, reptiles, and bats.

Albumen print of Johannes Gundlach (XIX century)

It is through the work of the proliferous Johannes Gundlach and Gilberto Silva Taboada that I came to love bats. In 1992, my parents gave me Silva Taboada's Los Murcielagos de Cuba (The Bats of Cuba), which to my delight had a great introduction to the life of Gundlach and his bat research.

Two-thousand-year-old fossils of Jamaican Fruit-eating bat (above)
and the ultra rare Cuban pallid bat Antrozous koopmani (below). 

Under the auspice of Gundlach and Silva, I studied the bats living in the roof of our schools and nearby caves, amassing a large set of information, with other colleagues, on the bat diversity in the city and nearby caves. This information resulted in over 100 new fossil and modern bat-collecting localities, several publications, and first records for the province of Matanzas.
For example, we (Ricardo Viera and I) reported the new records of the rare and extinct Common vampire bat Desmodus rotundus, Cuban fruit-eating bat Artibeus anthonyi, Peter’s ghost-faced bat Mormoops megalophylla, Greater funnel-eared bat Natalus primus, and Koopman’s pallid bat Antrozous koopmani. In addition, to new records of living Cuban lesser funnel-eared bat Chilonatalus macer, Cuban yellow bat Lasiurus insularis and Pfeiffer’s red bat Lasiurus pfeifferi , and including remote localities in the Zapata Swamp as in the urban Varadero (see publications here, and Viera's here).


A male Jamaican Fruit-eating bat Artibeus jamaicensis
from Palenque Hill Cave, Mayabeque. 

Currently, we are finishing a gazetteer on all the known fossil and modern bat localities in the province that can be useful towards entropy modeling for species distribution in the archipelago. We hope to collaborate with all those interested.

More so, the research continues. Some of our findings have been corroborated by Proyecto CUBABAT under the direction of Melissa Connelly, with the collaboration of colleagues in Matanzas. They have recently reported, and photographed, the Cuban fig-eating bat Phyllops falcatus in Varadero, so far only reported there from fossil remains (see citations above), and the Cuban lesser funnel-eared bat Chilonatalus macer, and Pfeiffer’s red bat Lasiurus pfeifferi (M. Connelly, pers. comm.) This project has a great potential, for it disseminates important information on the ecological importance of bats. Additionally,  through research, they collect useful data crucial for bat conservation in not only Matanzas but also all of Cuba and the Greater Antilles.

We wish them success!


Acknowledgements

I thank once more, my friend and mentor Dr. Adrian Tejedor for his support and guidance. And once again for helping unravel my torturous prose. Thank you profe. I also thank Ricardo A. Viera, Lazaro Vinola, Leonel Perez, Canido Santana, and Joel Monzon for the information provided and years of trecking up and down the caves of Matanzas in search of bats and fossils.

Sources


1. Silva-Taboada, G. 1979. Los Murciélagos de Cuba. Editorial Academia, La Habana. 424pp.

2. Iturralde-Vinent, M. see his geological literature regarding Matanzas on Biblioteca Digital Cubana de Geociencias.

3. Atlas Nacional de Cuba 1969-1985.

Jiménez, O., M. M. Condis, and E. García. 2005. Vertebrados post-glaciales en un residuario fósil de Tyto alba scopoli (Aves: Tytonidae) en el occidente de Cuba. Revista Mexicana de Mastozoología, 9:84-111.

Orihuela, J. 2011. Skull variation of the vampire bat Desmodus rotundus (Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae): Taxonomic implications for the Cuban fossil vampire bat Desmodus puntajudensis. Chiroptera Neotropical 17(1): 963-976.

Orihuela, J. 2012. Late Holocene fauna from a cave deposit in Western Cuba: post-Columbian occurrence of the vampire bat Desmodus rotundus (Phyllostomidae: Desmodontinae). Caribbean Journal of Science, 46 (2): 297-313.

Orihuela, J., and A. Tejedor. 2012. Peter's ghost-faced bat Mormoops megalophylla (Chiroptera: Mormoopidae) from a pre-Columbian archaeological deposit in Cuba. Acta Chiropterologica 14(1): 63-72.

Orihuela, J., R. Viera, and L. Vinola. 2017. New bat records based on modern and fossil remains from the province of Matanzas, Cuba.

Suárez, W. 2005. Taxonomic Status of the Cuban Vampire Bat (Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae: Desmodontinae: Desmodus). Caribbean Journal of Science 41 (4):761-767.

Viera, R. A. 2004. Aportes a la Quiropterofauna nacional. 1861: Revista de Espeleologia y Arqueologia, Matanzas, 5 (1): 21-23.

Woloszyn, B.W., and N.A. Mayo. 1974. Postglacial remains of a vampire bat (Chiroptera: Desmodus) from Cuba. Acta Zool.Cracoviensia 19:253-265.



Tuesday, October 11, 2016

Columbus and Rediscovery of the New World

In October we celebrate Christopher Columbus's rediscovery of the New World.

On October 11, 1492, Rodrigo de Triana shouted "land!" from the mast of the Santa Maria. The next morning, on the island of Guanahani, modern Bahamas, Columbus and his crew began an unprecedented conquest of the Americas that involved the extinction of thousands of species and the introduction of many others.

Engraving from 1496 showing explorers on their way to the New World. 

The most expensive, and even outrageous of human enterprises have been military in nature. Science usually tags alongside such enterprises, but not riding shotgun. Columbus's exploration was funded by the interest of the Spanish sovereigns in search of new riches and a military position that could compete with the growing powers of Portugal and England. And although it brought map makers (cartographers), cosmographers, and geographers, scientific interest was low in his first voyages. 

It was only after that science extended its arms outwards, alongside colonization. Soon after the rediscovery--and I continue to use the term rediscovery because humans had already discovered the American continent some 15,000 years before, and northern Europeans 1000 years earlier--native Amerindians succumbed to the new colonist's diseases, enslavement, and weapons. Unfortunately, the science that came along was opportunistic and cast a heavyweight on the existence of many native species with scant documentation.

The first colonists had to eat off the land, and in many cases brought with them animals that soon became feral where they did not evolve or were not suited for ecologically, driving other native species to extinction.

Native fruit plants from an engraving in Benzoni's Historia del Mondo Novo (1563).

An interesting case is that told by father Bartolome de la Casas. In 1512, during the official exploration and conquest of Cuba by Diego Velazquez, he and his crew killed and ate thousands of Cuban macaws (Ara cubensis) in Casaharta, a town in central-northern Cuba.
The Cuban macaw has been extinct in Cuba since the 19th century but had been rare since the 18th century, when deforestation and overhunting for its beautiful feathers drove it to rarity, and later extinction. In the mid 19th century, the German naturalist Johannes Gundlach found it in the Zapata Swamp, southwestern Cuba.
A similar case has occurred to the Cuban crows (Corvus minutus and Corvus nasicus), and the Cuban ivorybill woodpecker (Campephilus principalis) to name a few.  These species had survived at least a million years of climate change, and over 5000 years of Amerindian coexistence, to become extinct during the colonization (see some of my own research on this here).




But the scientifically inclined explorers served well by documenting what they could about the lush natural richness of the Americas. Among them, Peter Martyr, a geographer, was the first historian of the New World. Others such as the Spanish Oviedo and the Italian Benzoni included detailed accounts of the native species found in the American Eden. Plants, animals, and even cryptic mythological creatures were initially described, such as the manati, a water mammal though to be a siren. Its scientific mammalian order--Sirenia--carries the idiosyncrasies of the era that brought it--through science--to world knowledge.

Engraving of a manati, a sirenian marine mammal as described by Oviedo in his
Historia General de las Indias (1547).


Tuesday, May 31, 2016

The Bats of Cuba

Bats inhabit nearly every landmass on the planet, with the exception of the arctic and Antarctica, reaching their maximum diversity in the tropics. Current tallies rank bat diversity at 202 genera and over a thousand species! (Simmons, 2005).

Bats are highly specialized mammals. Not only can they truly fly (meaning powered flight), but they use echolocation to navigate and detect prey while in flight. Echolocation is a way of navigation by echoes, which bats and other mammals like dolphins emit to sense their environment and find food. Some birds, like the oilbird Steatornis caripensis, uses echolocation, but at a level we can hear. In addition to their characteristic webbed wings, their eyesight is better in the dark than ours, demystifying their bad reputation of poor eyesight.

Leach's single leaf-nosed bat Monophyllus redmani (subspecies clinedaphus) a
pollen-nectar feeder Microchiropteran common to the Greater Antilles

Chiropterans are divided into two groups: the small echolocating bats or Microchiroptera, and the non-echolocating and much larger Megachiroptera. The giant bats portrayed in movies often represent the large fruit-eating Megachiropterans. They are not all vampire bats!    

Ecologically, bats play keystone roles in the consumption of insects, distribution of plant seeds, and pollination of plants. Other bats are carnivores, also helping maintain the ecological balance of the ecosystems they inhabit.

Bats are the most diverse mammals of the Cuban archipelago representing over 75% of Cuba's mammalian fauna! Of the 34 species of mammals recorded in Cuba, 26 are bats. Currently, these 26 species are classified into six main groups including the nose-leaf bats (phyllostomids), the funnel-eared bats (natalids), the fisher bulldog bat (noctilionid), the free-tailed mastiffs (molossids), the insectivorous ghost-faced bats (mormoopids) and the vespertilionids. The majority are well distributed within the main island of Cuba, the isle of Pines, and a few of the thousand keys that make up the archipelago (Silva, 1983; Mancina, 2011, 2012).


Waterhouse's leaf-nosed bat Macrotus waterhousei
and the Cuban fig-eating bat Phyllops falcactus digitally
drawn by biologist and bat specialist Dr. Adrian Tejedor from
field sketches of specimens captured in Pinar del Rio.

The Cuban archipelago is the largest of the Antillean islands. It is located in the Antillean subzone of the Neotropics where it enjoys a warm weather and abundant rainfall most of the year. The geological formation of the Caribbean islands provided an intricate and complex mosaic of calcium-rich rocks, such as limestone, so important to cave formation and varied soils. Altogether, these variables give rise to lush vegetation, which supported by the warm climate, incites Cuba's biodiversity, especially of bats.

The Cuban archipelago, in the Caribbean basin, as seen in Google Earth.

Geologically, Cuba has been available for bat colonization since the latest Eocene (MacPhee and Iturralde, 1994). This means that there have been somewhat permanent group of islands where Cuba is located today, at least for the last 35 million years, giving ample time for bats to reach it and evolve there.
In the Pliocene - 5 million years ago - the islands had their largest subaerial extent, and thus their largest landmass increase to date (Iturralde, 2010). This was followed by the multiple landmass fluctuations experienced during the Quaternary glaciations. During the last 800,000 years, the Cuban archipelago increased and decreased in size at least 20 times, with the glacial periods decreasing sea levels, and the interglacials increasing it. This is within a range of ~20 meters from the modern standard. In effect, this had substantial effects on the formation of karstic features, such as caves, that serve some bats as roosts, affected plant distribution, and likely also the distribution and evolution of bats in the island. But most importantly, it likely played a role on the total number of species the archipelago could sustain.


A lone Cuba fruit bat Artibeus jamaicensis parvipes in roost in Cueva Ambrosio,
Varadero, alongside Amerindian cave pictographs.

During the Quaternary, Cuba, and the Bahamas acted like a single archipelago. Today that archipelago is mostly drowned by higher sea levels. Increased sea levels likely flooded potential cave roosts affecting strict cave dwellers. There are bats that have adapted not only to live in caves but also preferring hotter environments within cave systems. Caves with hotter than normal chambers are called "hot caves" because the temperature in some of its rooms increases to above 40 degrees C with a relative humidity above 90 percent. These hot environment form in chambers with restricted access, in which large colonies of the bats roost. Their body heat, perspiration, urine and droppings, all within a very restricted and poorly ventilated cave room results in the abnormal increase in room temperature and humidity. Hot cave bats include the pollen-eater Phyllonycteris poeyi and Pteronotus quadridens.

The changes in world climate during the last 2 million years, or that Quaternary epoch that we've been referring to, brought changes in rainfall, temperatures, and potential land size, therefore potentially affecting different species. However, bats were not significantly culled by the Quaternary climatic fluctuations, as far as we can tell today from the fossil record, in comparison to other mammals groups, like monkeys and sloths, which disappeared completely. Cuba lost only three species during the last glacial maximum, ~18,000 years ago, as indicated by the fossil record of Cueva El Abron, in Pinar del Rio (see Suarez and Diaz-Franco, 2003; Balseiro, 2011). Others survived until a thousand years ago or less (Orihuela, 2012; Orihuela and Tejedor, 2012, Orihuela et al, in prep).


The greater bulldog bat Noctilio leporinus. This is Cuba's largest bat. It feeds mostly on fish,
but it has been observed eating insects near street lamps.


Cuban bats, like most bats, inhabit most ecosystems where they have evolved adaptations to many forms of feeding. There are bats that eat insects, seeds, fruits, nectar, pollen, and some that feed only on blood, such as the infamous vampire bats, or fish - as the Noctilio leporinus above. In the past, there were vampire bats in Cuba. Vampire bats are locally extinct in Cuba today, but their fossil remains suggest their presence on the main island up to several hundred years ago! (Suarez, 2005; Orihuela, 2011, 2012) (see my previous post on vampire bats here).


Thomas Horsfield on the right and John Edward Grey on the left.
Both men dedicated time to collecting and describing the first Cuban bats during the XIX century.

We owe the first published account on Cuban bats to Thomas Horsfield, who sent a letter to the prestigious Zoological Journal in 1828 while he resided in Cuba. Horsfield and the British naturalist William Sharp MacLeay sent specimens to the British museum. These specimens allowed John Edward Grey to properly describe the first species in 1840 in his article "Description of some Chiroptera discovered in Cuba", published in the Annals of the Natural History, volume IV (Silva, 1983).

The Antillean fruit-eating bat Brachyphylla cavernarum and the big free-tailed bat Nyctinomops macrotis
lithographs from Grey's first description of Cuban bats. These are also the first graphic depiction of any Cuban bat.
Lithographs made by the french J. Basire in 1839. B.cavernarum here is likely B. nana but nana was not properly
described until the early XX century.

Since then, and no doubt thanks to the efforts of many naturalists such as Johannes Gundlach in the XIX century and Gilberto Silva-Taboada of the XX, among others, the knowledge on the natural history of Cuban bats grew steadily. Their research quickly demonstrated the diversity of the Cuban bat fauna. There are more species in Cuba, with species representing most of the known New World groups, than in all the North American continent!

  Parnell's mustached bat Pteronotus parnelli from Nesofontes Cave near Matanza, Cuba.

The Cuban bat fauna is surrounded in interesting stories of accidental discoveries and rediscoveries. Such as it happened to the two bat specialists, the Cuban mastozoologist G. Silva-Taboada and Karl Koopman of the American Musem of Natural History (NY) while mistnetting bats in the Pan de Guajaibon, Pinar del Rio, in the 1950s. There they caught a living Cuban pallid bat Antrozous koopmani, the only one ever caught alive for decades. This is a species similar to the pallid bat Antrozous pallidus of the arid western U.S. The Cuban pallid was previously known from a handful of isolated skulls and two specimens preserved in spirits collected in the early decades of the XX century. The feat his yet to be repeated. Antrozous koopmani is today the rarest of Cuban bats, and is presumed nearly extinct (Mancina, 2012).

The list is followed by the greater funnel-eared bat Natalus primus, a critically endangered species known alive only from the single location of La Barca cave in Guanahacabibes, extreme western Cuba. There it was rediscovered by biologist Adrian Tejedor in 1991. Tejedor has written several interesting articles and a monograph on the rare and interesting funnel-eared bats (Natalids) of Cuba and the Caribbean (Tejedor, 2011 and citations therein). Cuba has other two funnel-eared bats. One of them, Nyctiellus lepidus, is one of the smallest bats in the world, known in Cuba as the "butterfly bat". The other, Chilonatalus macer, is similar to the Natalus major on the right of the image below but smaller.  Cuban natalids are all are endemic.

Left: Pteronotus quadridens from Hispaniola. Right: Hispaniolan funnel-eared bat
Natalus major from Cueva de Los Patos, also in Hispaniola.
These are small insectivores that live only in caves.


Other interesting records include Myotis sodalis, likely an errant from Florida found mummified by G. Silva in the city of Havana during the winter of 1966 (Silva, 1983). Eumops perotis, likely a vagrant or erroneous record dating back to 1839, a tree-dwelling Lasiurus insularis found by Ricardo Viera on the banks of the Yumuri River, Matanzas, in 2004, and our rediscovery of Desmodus rotundus in 2003; the fifth vampire bat fossil record from Cuba, among other informative, but isolated discoveries (Silva, 1983; Viera, 2004; Orihuela, 2010; Orihuela et al, in prep.). To this adds an array of new species and new deposits rich in bat fossils (Silva, 1974; Suarez, 2005; Suarez and Diaz-Franco, 2003; Mancina and Garcia, 2005; Jimenez et al., 2005; Balseriro, 2011; Orihuela, 2012).

Most of these latter species, however, are either accidental records, critically endangered, extirpated or extinct today. In addition to the extant 26 species, there are 8 disappeared species for a total of 34 known to have existed in Cuba at least during the last 20,000 years. The complex account of Cuban bat extinctions is reserved for an upcoming post; a topic most interesting to me, and the focus of most of my research.

Stay tuned!


The greater Cuban funnel-eared bat Natalus primus, severely endangered
and extant only in Cueva la Barca, Guanacahabibes, western Cuba.
Digital painting by, and copyright of Adrian Tejedor.


References

There are more citations, especially on area restriction, bat habitat, feeding, and climatic changes of the Quaternary that, if included, would have made this post a bit more tedious. I think, however, that the references below, in addition to the work of Angel Soto-Centeno, David Steadman, Danny Rojas and Liliana Davalos, will provide a good background for those interested in keeping up with this ever-growing body of literature.

Balseriro, F. 2011. Los murcielagos extinctos. pp: 171-177 en Borroto-Paez, R. y C. A. Mancina (eds) Mamiferos en Cuba. UPC print, Vaasa

Jiménez, O., M. M. Condis, and E. García. 2005. Vertebrados post-glaciales en un residuario fósil de Tyto alba scopoli (Aves: Tytonidae) en el occidente de Cuba. Revista Mexicana de Mastozoología, 9:84-111.

Koopman, K.F. 1958. A fossil vampire bat from Cuba. Breviora 90:1-4.

Suárez, W. 2005. Taxonomic Status of the Cuban Vampire Bat (Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae: Desmodontinae: Desmodus). Caribbean Journal of Science 41 (4):761-767.

Gonzalez, Alonso, et al. 2012. Libro Rojo de los Vertebrados de Cuba. Editorial Academia, La Habana. See "Mamiferos" pp:269-291 by mastozoologist Carlos Mancina.

Mancina, C. A., and L. Garcia. 2005. New genus and specis of fossil bat (Chiroptera:Phyllostomidae) from Cuba. Caribbean Journal of Science, 41: 22-27.

Mancina, C. A. 2011. Introduccion a los murcielagos pp: 123-133 en Borroto-Paez, R. y C. A. Mancina (eds) Mamiferos en Cuba. UPC print, Vaasa

Orihuela, J. 2011. Skull variation of the vampire bat Desmodus rotundus (Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae): Taxonomic implications for the Cuban fossil vampire bat Desmodus puntajudensisChiroptera Neotropical 17(1): 963-976.

Orihuela, J. 2012. Late Holocene fauna from a cave deposit in Western Cuba: post-Columbian occurrence of the vampire bat Desmodus rotundus (Phyllostomidae: Desmodontinae). Caribbean Journal of Science, 46 (2): 297-313.

Orihuela, J., and A. Tejedor. 2012. Peter's ghost-faced bat Mormoops megalophylla (Chiroptera: Mormoopidae) from a pre-Columbian archaeological deposit in Cuba. Acta Chiropterologica 14(1): 63-72.

Orihuela, J., R. Viera, and L. Vinola. 2017. New bat records based on modern and fossil remains from the province of Matanzas, Cuba.  

Silva Taboada, G. 1974. Fossil Chiroptera from cave deposits in Central Cuba, with a description of two new species, and the first record of Mormoops megalophylla. Acta Zoologica Cracoviensia, 19: 33-83.

Silva Taboada, G. 1983. Los Murcielagos de Cuba. Editorial Academia, La Habana.

Suarez, W. and S. Diaz-Franco. 2003. A new fossil bat (Chiroptera:Phyllostomidae) from a Quaternary cave deposit in Cuba. Caribbean Journal of Science, 39:371-377.

Tejedor, A. 2011. Systematics of the funnel-eared bats (Chiroptera: Natalidae). Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist. 353.



Sunday, January 3, 2016

Barbuda Gets a New Fossil Bat Record


I am happy to announce the first record of Peters' ghost-faced bat Mormoops megalophylla from the Caribbean island of Barbuda (Orihuela and Tejedor, 2015). Our report is based on fossil remains excavated by the late Walter Auffenberg and F. Wayne King during their fieldwork there in the late 1950s.

Fossil left dentary (mandible) of Peters ghost-faced bat Mormoops megalophylla from the Barbuda, FLMNH.

These remains represent an interesting extralimital record for these bats. They, along with other known fossil bats, indicate that the Antigua-Barbuda archipelago in the Lesser Antilles had a greater bat diversity than today. This is the apparent scenario in all of the West Indian islands.

Peters ghost-faced bats are medium-sized insectivorous bats, well-spread endemics of the Americas. They belong to the Mormoopidae bat family, where some are peculiarly called ghost-faced bats because of their horrific facial warts and flaps. Such intricate facial ornaments help these bats to echolocate, a sonar-like sound emission that allows them to catch insects while in flight. Despite their terrific facial expressions - which many find fascinating, I included - they are proficient insect hunters, especially of moths, and can devour dozens of them in a single night. Mormoopids are among the fastest flying bats.

Adult Antillean ghost-faced bat Mormoops blainvillei from Los Patos, in southern Dominican Republic, Hispaniola. This species is very similar to Peter's ghost-faced bat M. megalophylla but is much smaller and endemic to the Caribbean.















My research often takes me to visit museum collections. Some of these collections can be well over a century old, some can be even older. Most museum's priced collections reside in their drawers and cabinets, away from the public eye. Sometimes field samples are sent to museums where they are stored away awaiting their cleaning. Sometimes they are forgotten, only to be rediscovered decades later. For researchers, these can be real treasure troves. I was fortunate to find such a hidden treasure while studying fossil bats in the vertebrate paleontology collections at the University of Florida in 2004 (FLMNH at UF) were A. Tejedor and I (re)discovered these specimens.

While looking through some boxes we found particular remains of Mormoops megalophylla within the multiple vials of unidentified and uncatalogued remains from caves at Two Foot Bay, on the eastern side of the island of Barbuda in the Lesser Antilles. They had been erroneously identified as another smaller but highly similar species, the Antillean ghost-faced bat Mormoops blainvillei.


Fossil mormoopid dentary collection from Barbuda stored for research, Florida Museum of Natural History.

Such a discovery is not unexpected. Many of the material collected in these caves still remains to be studied and cataloged. It is often the practice of field and museum researchers to keep some of the original sediments saved in museum collections for further research in the future.

In this sense, the museum's archival role is evident. They serve as a record of life's history. An educational institution dedicated to research and preservation. It is important that museums continue to fulfill their roles, because as it is the case in science, one never knows from where will the next discovery come from.

To share my love for museums once more, please visit my previous post The Stories in Museum Drawers.

Friday, June 19, 2015

Mono de Mariana (Paralouatta marianae), el primate más antiguo del Caribe




Escrito por Osvaldo Jiménez Vázquez con fotografías e ilustraciones de los archivos de los doctores Ross D. MacPhee y Manuel Iturralde-Vinent

En 1992, un equipo de geólogos y paleontólogos de los Museos de Historia Natural de Cuba y Americano de Historia Natural, de New York, parte al campo para localizar lugares donde estuvieran expuestas rocas antiguas originadas en ambientes terrestres, en las que fuera probable encontrar restos de los primeros mamíferos que llegaron a Cuba, incluidos los primates. El proyecto de búsqueda se basaba en estudios geológicos que sugerían que Cuba, y el resto de las Antillas Mayores, habían estado cercanas al continente Sudamericano, con el cual compartían tres grupos de mamíferos, primates, perezosos y roedores. 

Foto 1. Equipo de trabajo de noviembre del 1993. De izquierda a derecha, en primera fila, Inés Horovitz, Ross MacPhee, Teresita Huerta, Manuel Iturralde-Vinent. Fila trasera, Stephen Diaz Franco, Osvaldo Jiménez Vázquez (autor de esta nota) y Reinaldo Rojas Consuegra.


El grupo Samá, de la Sociedad Espeleológica de Cuba, residente en la provincia de Sancti Spíritus, informó acerca de un yacimiento paleontológico situado a 18 km al sudeste de la ciudad homónima, próximo a la presa Zaza, en el municipio La Sierpe. Este yacimiento había aflorado con la excavación del Canal Zaza, profundo y prolongado conducto de irrigación que cortó una colina, denominada desde entonces Domo de Zaza, quedando expuestos unos 3 km de estratos o capas de sedimentos a ambos lados del canal. De acuerdo con sus características geológicas y paleoecológicas, estos sedimentos se habían originado bajo la influencia de ambientes marinos y terrestres, y tenían una edad entre 18 y 21 millones de años. En la época en que se formaban esos sedimentos, el territorio de Cuba estaba dividido en tres archipiélagos, uno occidental, uno central y otro al este. El archipiélago central, donde se encuentra hoy el yacimiento paleontológico de Domo de Zaza, era una isla elevada y de poca extensión, circundada por un mar de escasa profundidad con cayos inundados periódicamente.

Foto 2: Tres vistas del yacimiento Domo de Zaza, a la izquierda, vistas del canal y de los sedimentos expuestos; a la derecha, vistas de los estratos documentados. Abreviaturas, SG, sedimentos aluviales con gravas y arenas,  GC, arcilla de lagunas, CL, estrato de carbonatos marinos, CB,  lecho de calcarenita marina, PS, paleosuelo. De MacPhee et al., 2003.


Domo de Zaza era, pues, el sitio ideal para la búsqueda, sin embargo, los huesos no se encuentran con facilidad. Entre los inconvenientes estaba la extensión del área a explorar, la abundancia de marabú (Dichrostachys cinerea), lo difícil de distinguir los huesos entre millones de fragmentos de rocas, y el sol abrasador. En la primera expedición se encontraron fragmentos de huesos de un perezoso, consistentes en un hueso craneal, un diente, un húmero, una vértebra y una pelvis. Los investigadores estaban emocionados pues se trataba de una especie nueva para la ciencia, nombrada más adelante Imagocnus zazae, nombre que significa “perezoso soñado, de Domo de Zaza”. Este hallazgo fue importante para la historia de la fauna del Caribe pues se había encontrado uno de los parientes más antiguo de los perezosos autóctonos y estaba relacionado con los perezosos argentinos del período Neógeno (entre 23,3 y 1,64 millones de años).

Al año siguiente, en el mes de noviembre, se organizó una segunda expedición, dirigida nuevamente por los doctores Ross MacPhee y Manuel Iturralde-Vinent, con la colaboración de los investigadores Inés Horovitz, Reinaldo Rojas, Stephen Díaz Franco y quien suscribe. Esta fue muy exitosa, pues se encontró un resto de otra especie nueva, esta vez un mono (Paralouatta marianae).
Foto 3: El autor en el momento del hallazgo del astrágalo del mono de Mariana (Paralouatta marianae). En la mano derecha sostiene la pieza ósea.


Este hallazgo fue muy emocionante. Llevábamos días sin encontrar algún resto significativo y dominaba el desanimo. El día del descubrimiento, tenía fe de que haríamos un hallazgo importante y así lo manifesté a mis compañeros durante el viaje en jeep hacia el sitio. Horas después, encontramos un astrágalo de mono. La celebración fue grande esa noche. La pieza encontrada permitió conocer aspectos interesantes de la vida de este primate fósil. Las dimensiones del astrágalo son casi similares a las del mono aullador actual Alouatta caraya, el cual tiene un peso que oscila entre 5 y 7 kg. Es decir, Paralouatta marianae era un mono de talla apreciable. También se supo que no fue un mono muy saltador, estando apto para caminar y correr sobre las ramas, y pasar gran parte de su tiempo de actividad diaria sobre el suelo.


Foto 4: Astrágalo del mono de Mariana (Paralouatta marianae), vista dorsal y vista ventral. Used in MacPhee et al., 2003.


El estudio de los mamíferos terrestres del Domo de Zaza demostró que estos animales tenían parientes fósiles y vivientes en Sudamérica, desde donde vinieron sus ancestros, como se teorizaba en la hipótesis que mencionamos previamente. Estos nexos filogenéticos motivaron que se estudiara más a fondo la manera y la época en que los antecesores de nuestros perezosos, roedores y primates pudieron arribar al Caribe. Para esto se tomaron en cuenta diferentes hipótesis geológicas, llegándose a conformar una nueva idea, que ha sido generalmente aceptada.

Foto 5: Trabajos de campo en el yacimiento Domo de Zaza, 1994. Stephen Díaz (con overol azul) y el autor (con gorra y camisa blancas), observan a Pável Valdés extrayendo el carapacho de una tortuga marina de la familia Pelomedusidae


Esta idea plantea con suficiente certeza que hace unos 35-33 millones de años, en el límite entre las épocas Eoceno y Oligoceno, pudo existir una cadena de islas entre el norte de Suramérica y las Antillas Mayores. Estaban emplazadas a lo largo de la Cresta de Aves, una cadena de montañas actualmente sumergida al oeste de las Antillas Menores, que se elevo sobre el nivel del mar en la época señalada, por la coincidencia de un levantamiento tectónico y un considerable descenso del nivel marino. En ese momento, las islas del norte del arco de las Antillas Mayores (centro y oriente de Cuba – Haití-Republica Dominicana - Puerto Rico – Islas Vírgenes) constituían una sola isla grande o una serie de islas separadas por espacio marinos muy estrechos. La cadena de islas de la Cresta de Aves estaba emergida entre el bloque Puerto Rico – Islas Vírgenes y un pequeño continente noroccidental de Suramérica –separado en ese momento del resto del continente por un amplio espacio marino. Los geólogos que postularon esta nueva idea llamaron a la cadena de islas o guirnalda insular Gaarlandia, que significa “tierra montañosa entre la Cresta de Aves y las Antillas Mayores”.


Foto 6: Reconstrucción paleogeográfica de Cuba; se aprecian los archipiélagos que conformaban su territorio en el Mioceno temprano parte alta (18-21 millones de años). El Domo de Zaza está ubicado en el archipiélago central, marcado con una estrella encerrada en un círculo.

Esta guirnalda de islas estuvo emergida durante uno o dos millones de años, tiempo muy corto en términos geológicos, desapareciendo hace unos 32-30 millones de años, cuando el levantamiento regional que determinó la aparición de aquella cresta llegó a su fin. Esto ocurrió debido a un descenso general de los terrenos. Luego, las posteriores manifestaciones tectónicas en el Caribe, incidieron en la subdivisión estructural de las áreas terrestres existentes, lo que dio origen a las islas actuales de La Española, Cuba, Puerto Rico y la porción oriental de Jamaica, y los canales que las separan.

Todo parece indicar que Gaarlandia pudo ser la vía utilizada por los mamíferos terrestres antiguos para llegar al Caribe. Sin embargo, esta vía implicaba grandes dificultades. Entre estos impedimentos se cuenta que en determinados momentos, los propágulos fundadores o primeros ejemplares de los mamíferos que colonizaron las Antillas, debieron enfrentarse a las travesías marinas. De esta manera, solo pasaron aquellos que tuvieron capacidad de dispersión suficiente para sobrevivir el trayecto. Así, pues, de los grupos de animales que poblaron el pequeño continente noroccidental de Suramérica, solo tres órdenes de mamíferos terrestres están representados en el Caribe, de los cuales uno solo, los roedores, sobreviven.

Con la subdivisión de las islas antillanas las poblaciones de perezosos, roedores y monos quedaron aisladas, de manera que, a partir de uno o varios antecesores de origen sudamericano, se produjo un proceso evolucionario en el transcurso de varios millones de años, dando como resultado que en cada isla haya habido formas diferentes de primates, con la excepción de Puerto Rico, donde no se han encontrado estos animales hasta el momento.


Nota Final


Más información sobre el autor de este post puede encontrarse en su otro aporte en este blog sobre el mono de Varona.

MacPhee, R. D. E., and Manuel Iturralde-Vinent. 1994. First Tertiary land mammal from Greater Antilles: An Early Miocene sloth from Cuba. American Museum Novitates, 3094: 13pp.

MacPhee, R. D. E., M. A. Iturralde-Vinent, and E. S. Gaffney. 2003. Domo de Zaza, and Early Miocene Vertebrate Locality in South-Central Cuba, with notes on the tectonic evolution of  Puerto Rico and the Mona Passage. American Museum Novitates, 3394: 42pp.