Wallace Line. (Altaileopard / Wikimedia Commons)
The Wallace Line is an invisible and imaginary line that stretches across the Indonesian islands to demarcate the evolutionary differences of the fauna in that region. It gives us an interesting insight on the biogeographical history of the area.
Alfred Russel Wallace. (London Stereoscopic & Photographic Company)
Alfred Russel Wallace, a 19th-century British naturalist, travelled throughout the Malay Archipelago from 1854 to 1862 in order to study the natural history of that area. While exploring the Indonesian islands, he discovered that the fauna on some of the islands was different from that found to the east of those islands. In fact, the islands such as Sumatra, Borneo, Java, and Bali had animal life that was similar to other parts of Asia. They had tigers, rhinoceroses, tarsiers, and tapirs. On the other hand, the Lombok, Sulawesi, and Timor islands had marsupials, monotremes, tree kangaroos, and racquet-tailed kingfishers that were similar to the animal life in Australia.
The Wallace Line
In 1859, Wallace drew a hypothetical line to demarcate this difference in the fauna. This line started from the Indian Ocean and passed through the Lombok Strait between the islands of Bali and Lombok. It then turned northwards through the Makassar Strait between the islands of Borneo and Sulawesi, passed to the south of the island of Mindanao, and ended in the Philippine sea.
Later, the English biologist Thomas Henry Huxley named this imaginary line the Wallace Line.
The Indonesian islands to the east of the line are referred to as belonging to the biogeographical realm of Wallacea. They are separated from Australia and New Guinea by another imaginary line called Lydekker’s Line, which was delineated by the naturalist Richard Lydekker in 1885. Between these two lines is another line called the Weber Line along which both Asian and Australian fauna and their hybrid species are equally present.
Explanation – The Wallacea biogeographical realm
Starting in the 19th century, European naturalists developed the field of biogeography which is the study of how fauna came to be distributed around the earth over time. Using the presence of fauna as the main indicator, the naturalists divided the earth’s surface into biogeographical realms. Furthermore, they subdivided these realms into ecoregions containing different biomes and habitats. In each realm, the fauna more or less evolved in isolation, completely separated from the fauna of the other realms by natural barriers that prevented them from migrating. The largest natural barriers are the oceans, followed by deserts and mountain ranges. Islands, being isolated, are an easier and more convenient ecosystem for studying biogeography.
Biogeographers use the continental drift theory to explain the distribution of fauna. Until 140 to 175 million years ago, the continents of Asia and Australia were connected. During this period, the indigenous animals could move all across the huge landmass and reproduce. Then the continents started to drift apart, the ocean levels rose up, and the islands of the Malay Archipelago were formed on the continental shelves between the Asian and Australian continents.
A continental shelf is a part of a continent which has sunk under water.
The Sunda Shelf connects Asia with Borneo, Bali, Java, and Sumatra. Australia and New Guinea are connected by the Sahul Shelf to these islands. So, the ocean separated the land masses and this led to the evolution of different animal species on the two continents and on the islands between them over a period of some 50 million years.
During the last ice age, between 70,000 to 40,000 years ago, the ocean levels fell dramatically and opened up land bridges between Asia and the islands and between some of the islands and Australia. At this time, various fauna crossed these land bridges to the islands and roamed across them. However, the ice age soon ended, and the ocean levels rose up to 25 to 125 meters, effectively closing off the land bridges between the islands and the continents. The fauna were thus isolated on the islands that they happened to be on at that time, and, thereafter, they evolved in unique ways by adapting to the environment on these islands. Eventually, they became distinguishably different. These islands form the Wallacea biogeographical realm, and a very large number of endemic species of fauna now live on them.
Wallace’s great discovery
Over 500 islands lie to the east of Bali across the Lombak Strait and these are known to the Indonesians as Nusa Tengagara. From the northern islands of Lombok, Sumbawa, Flores, and Alor, these islands stretch over 1,300 km to the southern islands of Sumba, Savu, Roti, and Timor.
While studying and collecting birds in the area, Wallace noticed that the birds on some of the islands that were close to each other were very different and that the birds on some of the islands that were far from each other were of the same species. This was particularly noticeable on the island of Bali, which had 50 percent different birds from those on the island of Lombok, despite the fact that they were separated by a distance of just 25 km of water. But 97 percent of birds on Bali were present on Java. Also, 75 percent of the birds on Lombok are Asian species, while 14 percent of the birds on Bali are from Australia. Wallace was perplexed by this discovery. What was it that had made the birds that were capable of migrating to and from the islands remained on their respective islands, and why had they evolved in such distinctly different ways over the centuries?
The explanation for this goes back to the ice age when there was a land bridge between Java and Bali, whereas, in the same period, there was a water channel between Bali and Lombok. Some of the birds, being good flyers, crossed the water channel to Lombok and flew further to settle on the eastern islands. Similarly, birds flew from Sumbawa across the Sape Strait to Komodo and from Alor across the Ombai Strait to Timor.
After the ice age ended, when the water channels between the islands deepened and widened, these isolated birds became distinct from those that had remained on Java.
Of the 564 bird species in Nusa Tenggara, 144 are endemic. On the other hand, the island of Sulawesi’s endemic population includes 62 percent of mammals and reptiles, 27 percent of birds, and 76 percent of amphibians. Possums, and marsupials, which are related to kangaroos, crossed the land bridges from Australia to Sulawesi during the ice age. However, these animals could not cross the Makassar Strait to reach Borneo from Sulawesi.
Although there are differences in flora as well along the Wallace Line, they are not as distinctive as the fauna.
Enjoyed this article? Also, check out “Kármán Line: The Hypothetical Line That Delineates the Earth’s Atmosphere from Outer Space“.
Fact Analysis:
STSTW Media strives to deliver accurate information through careful research. However, things can go wrong. If you find the above article inaccurate or biased, please let us know at[emailprotected].
- Biogeography
- Evolution
- Faunal Boundary
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FAQs
The Wallace Line: The Invisible Line of Bio-Diversity in the Indian Ocean - STSTW? ›
This line started from the Indian Ocean and passed through the
Wallace's Line separates Australian and Southeast Asian fauna. It was first proposed in 1859 and runs through Indonesia, between Borneo and Sulawesi, and through the 35-kilometre-wide Lombok Strait between Bali and Lombok. Its enigmatic character has puzzled biologists for generations.
What is the Wallace line summary? ›The Wallace Line does not actually exist in reality. It is an imaginary line that intersects the Lombok Strait between the Indonesian islands of Bali and Lombok to the south, and extends north through the Makassar Strait between Kalimantan (Borneo) and Sulawesi.
What is the Wallace line quizlet? ›Wallace's line is the zoogeographical boundary proposed by Alfred Russel Wallace that separates the marsupial fauna of Australia and New Guinea from the non-marsupial fauna of Indosnesia. Weber's line is close to New Guinea.
Why is Wallace's line important? ›The Wallace and Weber lines are imaginary dividers used to mark the difference between species found in Australia and Papua New Guinea and Southeast Asia. This is especially apparent when considering the difference in mammals between the two regions.
What and where is the Wallace Line explain the significance of the Wallace line for our understanding of biodiversity and plate tectonics? ›Wallace's Line separates the Asian (Sunda tectonic plate) and Australian (Sahul plate) biotic regions and over a relatively small geographic area many lineages exhibit a sharp break in their distributions where groups are primarily found on only one side and few are found on both sides.
What are the invisible lines on the Earth called? ›Lines of latitude, also called parallels, are imaginary lines that divide the Earth. They run east to west, but measure your distance north or south. The equator is the most well known parallel. At 0 degrees latitude, it equally divides the Earth into the Northern and Southern hemispheres.
What are the invisible lines of the Earth? ›Invisible lines of latitude and longitude form a grid over the Earth. These lines help to create a co-ordinate to locate a place accurately.
What is the invisible line that runs from west to east? ›The prime meridian separates the eastern hemisphere from the western hemisphere. Halfway around the world, at 180 degrees longitude, is the International Date Line. The prime meridian is the line of 0° longitude, the starting point for measuring distance both east and west around Earth.
How did Wallace explain the Wallace Line? ›To account for the phenomenon, Wallace proposed an imaginary line to divide the region into two parts. The animals found on each side of the line can be shown to have an evolutionary connection to either Asia (to the West of the Wallace line) or Australasia (to the East).
Why is it called the Wallace Line? ›
It was during his field research in Indonesia that Wallace began to notice differences between the fauna in the east and the west of the archipelago; he discovered a faunal divide that split Indonesia into two separate parts – this divide became known as the Wallace Line.
How did humans cross the Wallace Line? ›While other hominins, such as Homo floresiensis, made water crossings to reach past the Wallace line from 1 million years ago, the current ecological evidence associated with their fossils and occupation sites suggest that they made use of expanding grasslands, and associated medium to large mammals, that appeared in ...
Which statement best summarizes the claim that Wallace makes in his speech? ›Which statement summarizes the claim that Wallace makes in his speech? Alabama has the right to continue policies of racial segregation.
What idea does Wallace come up with to explain how species change? ›Darwin and a scientific contemporary of his, Alfred Russel Wallace, proposed that evolution occurs because of a phenomenon called natural selection. In the theory of natural selection, organisms produce more offspring than are able to survive in their environment.
Who discovered the Wallace Line? ›Wallace Line, boundary between the Oriental and Australian faunal regions, proposed by the 19th-century British naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace.
How did Wallace explain the Wallace line? ›To account for the phenomenon, Wallace proposed an imaginary line to divide the region into two parts. The animals found on each side of the line can be shown to have an evolutionary connection to either Asia (to the West of the Wallace line) or Australasia (to the East).
What is the invisible line in the Earth called? ›The Equator is the invisible line that runs around the center of Earth at zero degrees latitude. Photograph by W. Robert Moore. 1/10. An equator is an imaginary line around the middle of a planet or other celestial body.
What is Wallace's line of Huxley? ›The Wallace Line or Wallace's Line is a faunal boundary line drawn in 1859 by the British naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace and named by English biologist Thomas Henry Huxley that separates the Biogeographical realms of Asia and Wallacea, a transitional zone between Asia and Australia.