| Literature DB >> 30150377 |
Erwin González-Guarda1,2,3, Alia Petermann-Pichincura4,5, Carlos Tornero4,6, Laura Domingo2,7, Jordi Agustí4,6,8, Mario Pino5, Ana M Abarzúa5, José M Capriles9, Natalia A Villavicencio10, Rafael Labarca5, Violeta Tolorza5, Paloma Sevilla2, Florent Rivals4,6,8.
Abstract
Proboscideans are so-called ecosystem engineers and are considered key players in hypotheses about Late Pleistocene megafaunal extinctions. However, knowledge about the autoecology and chronology of the proboscideans in South America is still open to debate and raises controversial views. Here, we used a range of multiproxy approaches and new radiocarbon datings to study the autoecology of Chilean gomphotheres, the only group of proboscideans to reach South America during the Great American Biotic Interchange (∼3.1 to 2.7 million years before present). As part of this study, we analyzed stable isotopes, dental microwear, and dental calculus microfossils on gomphothere molars from 30 Late Pleistocene sites (31° to 42°S). These proxies provided different scales of temporal resolution, which were then combined to assess the dietary and habitat patterns of these proboscideans. The multiproxy study suggests that most foraging took place in relatively closed environments. In Central Chile, there is a positive correlation between lower δ13C values and an increasing consumption of arboreal/scrub elements. Analyses of dental microwear and calculus microfossils have verified these leaf-browsing feeding habits. From a comparative perspective, the dietary pattern of South American gomphotheres appears to be constrained more by resource availability than by the potential dietary range of the individual taxa. This multiproxy study is aimed at increasing knowledge of the life history of gomphotheres and thus follows an issue considered one of the greatest challenges for paleontology in South America, recently pointed out by the need to thoroughly understand the role of ecological engineers before making predictions about the consequences of ecosystem defaunation.Entities:
Keywords: dental calculus; dental microwear; stable isotopes
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30150377 PMCID: PMC6140480 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1804642115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205
Fig. 1.Geographical setting of the fossil record of the gomphotheres analyzed in this study. (A) Fossil sites that provided the Notiomastodon molars for this study. (B) Location of the main geomorphic units of the South-Central Chile continental margin. The smooth areas were the most likely habitats for Notiomastodon. We highlighted those areas in purple by classifying the land-surface topography of the Chilean territory lower than 2,000 meters above sea level. To this end, we defined two land-surface classes according to their cross-sectional curvature (52) (). (C) Modern latitudinal gradient of aridity/humidity regions for the study area, from Casanova et al. (52).
Fig. 2.Isotopic range of δ13C (‰, Vienna Pee Dee Belemnite) values in bioapatite from our study area, corresponding to different vegetation types: (i) dense forest (e.g., Valdivian forest), Eucryphia cardifolia; (ii) low-density forest to mesic prairie C3 vegetation (e.g., northwestern Chilean Patagonia) with Nothofagus dombeyi (arboreal) and Aster vahlii and Adenocaulon chilense (grasses); (iii) open woodland to xeric C3 grasslands (e.g., Patagonian steppe) with Stipa speciosa and Poa lanuginosa; and (iv) open vegetation areas composed of C4 (e.g., Corrientes, Argentina) with Panicum grumosum (grasses). The arrows indicate a gradient of humidity/aridity. Values between −6.5 and −1.5‰ correspond to C3-C4 open areas. The white bars represent the isotopic range shown by North-Central and South-Central Chilean gomphotheres. Illustration is by Eloy Manzanero.
Fig. 3.(A) Bivariate plot of the average numbers of pits and scratches in Notiomastodon samples from Chile. Bars correspond to SD (±1 SD). Gray areas correspond to the Gaussian confidence ellipses (P = 0.95) on the centroid for extant leaf browsers (B) and grazers (G) from Solounias and Semprebon (21). (B) Recovered plant microfossils from the dental calculus of gomphotheres. Arboreal morphotypes: a–c. Poaceae morphotype: d–f. Cyperaceae morphotype: g. Other microfossils: h–k.