Browsing by Subject "Paleoecology"
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Item Open Access A baseline paleoecological study for the Santa Cruz Formation (late–early Miocene) at the Atlantic coast of Patagonia, Argentina(Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 2010-06) Vizcaíno, SF; Bargo, MS; Kay, RF; Fariña, RA; Di Giacomo, M; Perry, JMG; Prevosti, FJ; Toledo, N; Cassini, GH; Fernicola, JCCoastal exposures of the Santa Cruz Formation (late-early Miocene, southern Patagonia, Argentina) between the Coyle and Gallegos rivers have been a fertile ground for recovery of Miocene vertebrates for more than 100 years. The formation contains an exceptionally rich mammal fauna, which documents a vertebrate assemblage very different from any living community, even at the ordinal level. Intensive fieldwork performed since 2003 (nearly 1200 specimens have been collected, including marsupials, xenarthrans, notoungulates, litopterns astrapotheres, rodents, and primates) document this assertion. The goal of this study is to attempt to reconstruct the trophic structure of the Santacrucian mammalian community with precise stratigraphic control. Particularly, we evaluate the depauperate carnivoran paleoguild and identify new working hypotheses about this community. A database has been built from about 390 specimens from two localities: Campo Barranca (CB) and Puesto Estancia La Costa (PLC). All species have been classified as herbivore or carnivore, their body masses estimated, and the following parameters estimated: population density, on-crop biomass, metabolic rates, and the primary and secondary productivity. According to our results, this model predicts an imbalance in both CB and PLC faunas which can be seen by comparing the secondary productivity of the ecosystem and the energetic requirements of the carnivores in it. While in CB, the difference between carnivores and herbivores is six-fold, in PLC this difference is smaller, the secondary productivity is still around three times that of the carnivore to herbivore ratio seen today. If both localities are combined, the difference rises to around four-fold in favour of secondary productivity. Finally, several working hypotheses about the Santacrucian mammalian community and the main lineages of herbivores and carnivores are offered. © 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Item Open Access Dental Ecometrics as a Proxy of Paleoenvironment Reconstruction in the Miocene of South America(2017) Spradley, Jackson PlesIn this dissertation I compile modern mammalian faunal lists, as well as ecomorphological measurements on living marsupials and rodents, to relate the diversity of small mammals, specifically the distributions of their dental topographies, to the climates in which they are found. The emphasis of this dissertation is to demonstrate the potential of distributions of dental topography metrics as proxies for the reconstruction of paleoenvironments in the Miocene of South America.
In Chapter 2, I compile complete, non-volant mammalian species lists for 85 localities across South America as well as 17 localities across Australia and New Guinea. Climatic and habitat variables were also recorded at each locality using GIS spatial data. Additionally, basic ecological data was collected for each species, including: diet, body size, and mode of locomotion. Niche indices that describe the relative numbers of different ecologies were calculated for each locality. These indices then served as the predictor values in a handful of regression models, including regression trees, random forests, and Gaussian process regression. The Australian/New Guinean localities were used as a geographically and phylogenetically independent for the purposes of testing the models derived from South America.
As for the dental ecomorphological analysis, I use three separate measures of dental topography, each of which measures a different component of dental topography; relief (the Relief Index, or RFI), complexity (orientation patch count rotated, OPCR), and sharpness (Dirichlet normal energy, DNE). Together, these metrics quantify the shape of the tooth surface without regard for tooth size. They also do not depend on homologous features on the tooth surface for comparative analysis, allowing a broad taxonomic sample as I present here. After a methodological study of DNE in Chapter 3, I present correlative studies of dental topography and dietary ecology in marsupials and rodents in Chapters 4 and 5, respectively. Finally, using the same localities from Chapter 2, I analyze the distributions of dental topography metrics as they relate to climate and habitat.
Results suggest that sharpness and relief are positively correlated with a higher amount of tough foods—such as leaves or insects—in the diet of marsupials, and that relief is positively correlated with grass-eating in rodents. The distributions of all three metrics show some utility when used as a proxy for climatic variables, though the distributions of RFI in marsupials and OPCR in rodents demonstrate the best correlations.
Overall, this dissertation suggests that dental topography can be used to discriminate dietary categories in a wide variety of mammalian groups, and that the distributions of dental ecometrics can be used as proxies for paleoenvironment reconstruction. This may eliminate the need to reconstruct behavior in individual taxa in order to construct ecological indices for fossil mammalian communities, thus offering a more direct avenue to reconstructing past environments.
Item Open Access Dental topographic change with macrowear and dietary inference in Homunculus patagonicus.(Journal of human evolution, 2020-07) Li, Peishu; Morse, Paul E; Kay, Richard FHomunculus patagonicus is a stem platyrrhine from the late Early Miocene, high-latitude Santa Cruz Formation, Argentina. Its distribution lies farther south than any extant platyrrhine species. Prior studies on the dietary specialization of Homunculus suggest either a mixed diet of fruit and leaves or a more predominantly fruit-eating diet. To gain further insight into the diet of Homunculus, we examined how the occlusal surfaces of the first and second lower molars of Homunculus change with wear by using three homology-free dental topographic measures: Dirichlet normal energy (DNE), orientation patch count rotated (OPCR), and relief index (RFI). We compared these data with wear series of three extant platyrrhine taxa: the folivorous Alouatta, and the frugivorous Ateles and Callicebus (titi monkeys now in the genus Plecturocebus). Previous studies found Alouatta and Ateles exhibit distinctive patterns of change in occlusal morphology with macrowear, possibly related to the more folivorous diet of the former. Based on previous suggestions that Homunculus was at least partially folivorous, we predicted that changes in dental topographic metrics with wear would follow a pattern more similar to that seen in Alouatta than in Ateles or Callicebus. However, wear-induced changes in Homunculus crown sharpness (DNE) and complexity (OPCR) are more similar to the pattern observed in the frugivorous Ateles and Callicebus. Based on similar wear modalities of the lower molars between Homunculus and Callicebus, we infer that Homunculus had a primarily frugivorous diet. Leaves may have provided an alternative dietary resource to accommodate fluctuation in seasonal fruiting abundance in the high-latitude extratropical environment of late Early Miocene Patagonia.