Martin Jeremy E, Vance Derek, Balter Vincent
Bristol Isotope Group, School of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 1RJ, United Kingdom; UMR 5276 CNRS, Laboratoire de Géologie de Lyon: Terre, Planètes, et Environnement, École Normale Supérieure de Lyon et Université Lyon 1, 69364 Lyon, France; and
Institute for Geochemistry and Petrology, Department of Earth Sciences, Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich, 8092 Zürich, Switzerland.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Jan 13;112(2):430-5. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1417792112. Epub 2014 Dec 22.
Geochemical inferences on ancient diet using bone and enamel apatite rely mainly on carbon isotope ratios (δ(13)C) and to a lesser extent on strontium/calcium (Sr/Ca) and barium/calcium (Ba/Ca) elemental ratios. Recent developments in nontraditional stable isotopes provide an unprecedented opportunity to use additional paleodietary proxies to disentangle complex diets such as omnivory. Of particular relevance for paleodietary reconstruction are metals present in large quantity in bone and enamel apatite, providing that biologically mediated fractionation processes are constrained. Calcium isotope ratios (δ(44)Ca) meet these criteria but exhibit complex ecological patterning. Stable magnesium isotope ratios (δ(26)Mg) also meet these criteria but a comprehensive understanding of its variability awaits new isotopic data. Here, 11 extant mammal species of known ecology from a single locality in equatorial Africa were sampled for tooth enamel and, together with vegetation and feces, analyzed for δ(26)Mg, δ(13)C, Sr/Ca, and Ba/Ca ratios. The results demonstrate that δ(26)Mg incorporated in tooth enamel becomes heavier from strict herbivores to omnivores/faunivores. Using data from experimentally raised sheep, we suggest that this (26)Mg enrichment up the trophic chain is due to a (26)Mg enrichment in muscle relative to bone. Notably, it is possible to distinguish omnivores from herbivores, using δ(26)Mg coupled to Ba/Ca ratios. The potential effects of metabolic and dietary changes on the enamel δ(26)Mg composition remain to be explored but, in the future, multiproxy approaches would permit a substantial refinement of dietary behaviors or enable accurate trophic reconstruction despite specimen-limited sampling, as is often the case for fossil assemblages.
利用骨骼和牙釉质磷灰石对古代饮食进行地球化学推断,主要依赖于碳同位素比率(δ(13)C),在较小程度上依赖于锶/钙(Sr/Ca)和钡/钙(Ba/Ca)元素比率。非传统稳定同位素的最新进展提供了前所未有的机会,可利用额外的古饮食指标来解析复杂的饮食,如杂食性。对于古饮食重建特别相关的是骨骼和牙釉质磷灰石中大量存在的金属,前提是生物介导的分馏过程受到限制。钙同位素比率(δ(44)Ca)符合这些标准,但呈现出复杂的生态模式。稳定镁同位素比率(δ(26)Mg)也符合这些标准,但对其变异性的全面理解有待新的同位素数据。在这里,从赤道非洲的一个地点采集了11种已知生态的现存哺乳动物物种的牙釉质样本,并与植被和粪便一起分析了δ(26)Mg、δ(13)C、Sr/Ca和Ba/Ca比率。结果表明,纳入牙釉质中的δ(26)Mg从严格的食草动物到杂食动物/食动物逐渐变重。利用实验饲养绵羊的数据,我们认为这种营养级链上的(26)Mg富集是由于肌肉相对于骨骼的(26)Mg富集。值得注意的是,利用与Ba/Ca比率相结合的δ(26)Mg可以区分杂食动物和食草动物。代谢和饮食变化对牙釉质δ(26)Mg组成的潜在影响仍有待探索,但在未来,多指标方法将允许对饮食行为进行大幅改进,或者即使在样本有限的情况下(化石组合通常如此)也能进行准确的营养级重建。