Science. 1987 Aug 14;237(4816):768-70. doi: 10.1126/science.237.4816.768.
A dozen new radiocarbon dates, together with a thorough review of its fossil distribution, shed new light on the time and probable cause of extinction of the California condor, Gymnogyps californianus, in Grand Canyon, Arizona. The radiocarbon data indicate that this species became extinct in Grand Canyon, and other parts of the inland West, more than 10,000 years ago in coincidence with the extinction of megafauna (proboscidians, edentates, perissodactyls). That condors relied on the megafauna for food is suggested by the recovery of food bones from a late Pleistocene nest cave in Grand Canyon. These fossil data have relevance to proposed release and recovery programs of the present endangered population of California condors.
一打新的放射性碳测年数据,再加上对其化石分布的彻底审查,为加利福尼亚神鹫(Gymnogyps californianus)在亚利桑那州大峡谷灭绝的时间和可能原因提供了新的线索。放射性碳测年数据表明,这种物种在大峡谷和内陆西部的其他地区,在 1 万多年前就已经灭绝,与巨型动物群(长鼻目动物、无齿目动物、奇蹄目动物)的灭绝同时发生。从大峡谷一个更新世晚期的巢洞发现的食物骨骼表明,神鹫以巨型动物群为食。这些化石数据与目前加利福尼亚神鹫濒危种群的释放和恢复计划有关。