Prolagus likely evolved from the
Oligocene-earliest
Miocene genus
Piezodus. The distribution of
Prolagus between 20-8 million years ago extends from the
Iberian Peninsula in the west to
Anatolia in the east, extending as far north as central Germany, though it was absent from the Italian Peninsula. Early
Prolagus species are thought to have inhabited
subtropical swamp and
wetland environments, with a similar ecology to the living
marsh rabbit (
Sylvilagus palustris). In many European Miocene localities remains of
Prolagus are extraordinarily abundant, and
Prolagus species probably played a key role as prey for many predators. During the late Miocene,
Prolagus dispersed into North Africa due to the connection between Africa and Europe as a result of the
Messinian salinity crisis. The range of
Prolagus shifted southwards and substantially contracted outside of North Africa during the
Pliocene, due to climatic cooling and increasing aridity, though the genus reached its highest species richness at 9 species due to
habitat fragmentation leading to speciation. Among the last continental species of
Prolagus is
P. calpensis from the Early-Middle
Pleistocene of the
Iberian Peninsula. By the beginning of the
Late Pleistocene,
Prolagus was confined to the single species
P. sardus on Corsica, Sardinia and surrounding islands. While decline of the distribution
Prolagus on the mainland of the continents was primarily driven by climatic change, the cause of the final extinction of the mainland
Prolagus species is unclear, but one factor suggested is increased predation pressure. ==Notes==