Baca Mateusz, Popović Danijela, Stefaniak Krzysztof, Marciszak Adrian, Urbanowski Mikołaj, Nadachowski Adam, Mackiewicz Paweł
Center for Precolumbian Studies, University of Warsaw, Krakowskie Przedmieście 26/28, 00-927, Warszawa, Poland.
Institute of Genetics and Biotechnology, University of Warsaw, Pawińskiego 5A, 02-106, Warszawa, Poland.
Naturwissenschaften. 2016 Dec;103(11-12):92. doi: 10.1007/s00114-016-1414-8. Epub 2016 Oct 11.
The cave bear (Ursus spelaeus sensu lato) is a typical representative of Pleistocene megafauna which became extinct at the end of the Last Glacial. Detailed knowledge of cave bear extinction could explain this spectacular ecological transformation. The paper provides a report on the youngest remains of the cave bear dated to 20,930 ± 140 C years before present (BP). Ancient DNA analyses proved its affiliation to the Ursus ingressus haplotype. Using this record and 205 other dates, we determined, following eight approaches, the extinction time of this mammal at 26,100-24,300 cal. years BP. The time is only slightly earlier, i.e. 27,000-26,100 cal. years BP, when young dates without associated collagen data are excluded. The demise of cave bear falls within the coldest phase of the last glacial period, Greenland Stadial 3. This finding and the significant decrease in the cave bear records with cooling indicate that the drastic climatic changes were responsible for its extinction. Climate deterioration lowered vegetation productivity, on which the cave bear strongly depended as a strict herbivore. The distribution of the last cave bear records in Europe suggests that this animal was vanishing by fragmentation into subpopulations occupying small habitats. One of them was the Kraków-Częstochowa Upland in Poland, where we discovered the latest record of the cave bear and also two other, younger than 25,000 C years BP. The relatively long survival of this bear in karst regions may result from suitable microclimate and continuous access to water provided by deep aquifers, indicating a refugial role of such regions in the Pleistocene for many species.
洞熊(广义上的洞穴熊属)是更新世巨型动物的典型代表,在末次冰期结束时灭绝。对洞熊灭绝的详细了解有助于解释这一壮观的生态转变。本文报道了距今20930±140碳年(BP)的洞熊最晚遗迹。古DNA分析证明其属于洞穴熊单倍型。利用这一记录和其他205个数据,我们通过八种方法确定这种哺乳动物的灭绝时间为公元前26100 - 24300校准年。如果排除没有相关胶原蛋白数据的早期数据,该时间仅略早,即公元前27000 - 26100校准年。洞熊的灭绝发生在末次冰期最寒冷的阶段,即格陵兰间冰阶3。这一发现以及随着气候变冷洞熊记录显著减少表明,剧烈的气候变化是其灭绝的原因。气候恶化降低了植被生产力,而洞熊作为严格的食草动物强烈依赖植被。欧洲洞熊最晚记录的分布表明,这种动物因栖息地碎片化而逐渐消失,形成了占据小栖息地的亚种群。其中一个亚种群位于波兰的克拉科夫 - 琴斯托霍瓦高地,我们在那里发现了洞熊的最晚记录,以及另外两个距今不到25000碳年的记录。这种熊在岩溶地区相对较长时间的生存可能是由于适宜的小气候以及深层含水层提供的持续水源,这表明这些地区在更新世对许多物种起到了避难所的作用。