Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA.
J Hum Evol. 2012 Jul;63(1):127-39. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2012.04.004. Epub 2012 Jun 4.
Oreopithecus bambolii is a Late Miocene hominoid with an extensive fossil record in the Baccinello Basin (Tuscany, Italy), and was the only western European hominoid to survive a major extinction event ca. 9.6 Ma (millions of years ago). Oreopithecus lived in the insular Tusco-Sardinian paleobioprovince, where it evolved many unique anatomical specializations that make it important for understanding the mechanisms and history of Late Miocene hominoid evolution. The eventual extinction of Oreopithecus and its associated fauna ca. 6.5 Ma has generally been attributed to interaction with species that arrived from continental Europe following tectonic collision of the Tusco-Sardinian province with mainland Italy, but palynological, paleontological, and sedimentological records indicate an environmental shift toward more variable climate across the extinction event. To explore the possibility of environmental change as a contributing factor in the extinction of Oreopithecus, we developed a stable carbon and oxygen isotope record from organic matter in paleosols from the Baccinello Basin. These data show very low temporal and spatial variability (indicating plant ecosystem stability through time and space) and provide no evidence for ecologically significant changes in floral composition spanning the extinction event, suggesting that environmental change was not an underlying cause for the extinction of Oreopithecus and its associated fauna. The carbon isotope values fall entirely within the range of isotopic variability for modern plants following the C(3) photosynthetic pathway (trees, shrubs, cool-season grasses), indicating that C(4) vegetation (warm-season grasses) was not an important component of biomass. When corrected for temporal variation in the carbon isotopic composition of atmospheric carbon dioxide, the paleosol carbon isotope values are consistent with predicted values based on modern plants and the Baccinello palynoflora, supporting the reliability of paleosol isotopic records as paleoecological proxies.
奥里诺科猴是中新世晚期的灵长类动物,在意大利托斯卡纳的巴奇内洛盆地有广泛的化石记录,是唯一幸存下来的欧洲西部大型灭绝事件的灵长类动物,大约在 960 万年前。奥里诺科猴生活在托斯卡纳-撒丁岛的岛屿生物省,在那里它进化出了许多独特的解剖特征,这使其对于理解中新世晚期灵长类动物的进化机制和历史具有重要意义。大约 650 万年前,奥里诺科猴及其相关动物群的最终灭绝通常归因于与从欧洲大陆到达的物种的相互作用,当时托斯卡纳-撒丁岛省与意大利大陆发生构造碰撞,但孢粉学、古生物学和沉积学记录表明,在灭绝事件期间,气候向更具可变性的方向转变。为了探索环境变化作为奥里诺科猴灭绝的一个促成因素的可能性,我们从巴奇内洛盆地古土壤中的有机质中开发了一个稳定的碳和氧同位素记录。这些数据显示出非常低的时间和空间变异性(表明植物生态系统在时间和空间上的稳定性),并且没有提供在跨越灭绝事件的范围内,植物区系组成发生生态意义重大变化的证据,这表明环境变化不是奥里诺科猴及其相关动物群灭绝的根本原因。碳同位素值完全落在现代 C(3)光合作用途径植物的同位素变异性范围内(树木、灌木、冷季草),这表明 C(4)植被(暖季草)不是生物量的重要组成部分。当校正大气二氧化碳的碳同位素组成的时间变化时,古土壤的碳同位素值与基于现代植物和巴奇内洛孢粉植物的预测值一致,支持古土壤同位素记录作为古生态代理的可靠性。