Western David, Behrensmeyer Anna K
African Conservation Center, Box 62844, Nairobi, Kenya.
Science. 2009 May 22;324(5930):1061-4. doi: 10.1126/science.1171155.
Reconstructing ancient communities depends on how accurately fossil assemblages retain information about living populations. We report a high level of fidelity between modern bone assemblages and living populations based on a 40-year study of the Amboseli ecosystem in southern Kenya. Relative abundance of 15 herbivorous species recorded in the bone assemblage accurately tracks the living populations through major changes in community composition and habitat over intervals as short as 5 years. The aggregated bone sample provides an accurate record of community structure time-averaged over four decades. These results lay the groundwork for integrating paleobiological and contemporary ecological studies across evolutionary and ecological time scales. Bone surveys also provide a useful method of assessing population changes and community structure for modern vertebrates.
重建古代群落取决于化石组合保留有关现存种群信息的准确程度。基于对肯尼亚南部安博塞利生态系统长达40年的研究,我们报告了现代骨骼组合与现存种群之间的高度保真度。骨骼组合中记录的15种草食性物种的相对丰度,能够在短短5年的时间间隔内,随着群落组成和栖息地的重大变化,准确追踪现存种群。汇总的骨骼样本提供了一个在四十年时间里平均的群落结构的准确记录。这些结果为在进化和生态时间尺度上整合古生物学和当代生态学研究奠定了基础。骨骼调查还为评估现代脊椎动物的种群变化和群落结构提供了一种有用的方法。