Newsome Seth D, Etnier Michael A, Gifford-Gonzalez Diane, Phillips Donald L, van Tuinen Marcel, Hadly Elizabeth A, Costa Daniel P, Kennett Douglas J, Guilderson Tom P, Koch Paul L
Geophysical Laboratory, Carnegie Institution of Washington, 5251 Broad Branch Road NW, Washington, DC 20015, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2007 Jun 5;104(23):9709-14. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0610986104. Epub 2007 May 25.
Historical data provide a baseline against which to judge the significance of recent ecological shifts and guide conservation strategies, especially for species decimated by pre-20th century harvesting. Northern fur seals (NFS; Callorhinus ursinus) are a common pinniped species in archaeological sites from southern California to the Aleutian Islands, yet today they breed almost exclusively on offshore islands at high latitudes. Harvest profiles from archaeological sites contain many unweaned pups, confirming the presence of temperate-latitude breeding colonies in California, the Pacific Northwest, and the eastern Aleutian Islands. Isotopic results suggest that prehistoric NFS fed offshore across their entire range, that California populations were distinct from populations to the north, and that populations breeding at temperate latitudes in the past used a different reproductive strategy than modern populations. The extinction of temperate-latitude breeding populations was asynchronous geographically. In southern California, the Pacific Northwest, and the eastern Aleutians, NFS remained abundant in the archaeological record up to the historical period approximately 200 years B.P.; thus their regional collapse is plausibly attributed to historical hunting or some other anthropogenic ecosystem disturbance. In contrast, NFS populations in central and northern California collapsed at approximately 800 years B.P., long before European contact. The relative roles of human hunting versus climatic factors in explaining this ecological shift are unclear, as more paleoclimate information is needed from the coastal zone.
历史数据提供了一个基线,据此可以判断近期生态变化的重要性,并指导保护策略,特别是对于那些因20世纪前的捕猎而数量锐减的物种。北海狗(NFS;Callorhinus ursinus)是从南加利福尼亚到阿留申群岛的考古遗址中常见的鳍足类物种,但如今它们几乎只在高纬度的近海岛屿上繁殖。考古遗址的捕猎记录中有许多未断奶的幼崽,证实了加利福尼亚、太平洋西北部和阿留申群岛东部曾存在温带纬度的繁殖群体。同位素结果表明,史前北海狗在其整个分布范围内都在近海觅食,加利福尼亚的种群与北部的种群不同,过去在温带纬度繁殖的种群采用的繁殖策略与现代种群不同。温带纬度繁殖种群的灭绝在地理上是不同步的。在南加利福尼亚、太平洋西北部和阿留申群岛东部,北海狗在考古记录中一直大量存在,直到大约公元前200年的历史时期;因此,它们在这些地区的数量崩溃很可能归因于历史上的捕猎或其他人为的生态系统干扰。相比之下,加利福尼亚中部和北部的北海狗种群在公元前800年左右崩溃,远早于欧洲人到来。由于需要从沿海地区获取更多古气候信息,目前尚不清楚人类捕猎与气候因素在解释这一生态变化中各自所起的相对作用。