Chichkoyan Karina Vanesa, Figueirido Borja, Belinchón Margarita, Lanata José Luis, Moigne Anne-Marie, Martínez-Navarro Bienvenido
IPHES, Institut Català de Paleoecologia Humana i Evolució Social, Tarragona, Spain.
Area de Prehistoria, Universitat Rovira i Virgili (URV), Tarragona, Spain.
PeerJ. 2017 May 9;5:e3117. doi: 10.7717/peerj.3117. eCollection 2017.
Pleistocene South American megafauna has traditionally attracted the interest of scientists and the popular media alike. However, ecological interactions between the species that inhabited these ecosystems, such as predator-prey relationships or interspecific competition, are poorly known. To this regard, carnivore marks imprinted on the fossil bones of megamammal remains are very useful for deciphering biological activity and, hence, potential interspecific relationships among taxa. In this article, we study historical fossil collections housed in different European and Argentinean museums that were excavated during the 19th and early 20th centuries in the Pampean region, Argentina, in order to detect carnivore marks on bones of megamammals and provide crucial information on the ecological relationships between South American taxa during the Pleistocene. Our results indicate that the long bones of megafauna from the Pampean region (e.g., the Mylodontidae and Toxodontidae families) exhibit carnivore marks. Furthermore, long bones of medium-sized species and indeterminate bones also present punctures, pits, scores and fractures. Members of the large-carnivore guild, such as ursids, canids and even felids, are recognised as the main agents that inflicted the marks. We hypothesize that the analysed carnivore marks represent the last stages of megaherbivore carcass exploitation, suggesting full consumption of these animals by the same or multiple taxa in a hunting and/or scavenging scenario. Moreover, our observations provide novel insights that help further our understanding of the palaeoecological relationships of these unique communities of megamammals.
更新世南美洲巨型动物群传统上一直吸引着科学家和大众媒体的关注。然而,栖息在这些生态系统中的物种之间的生态相互作用,如捕食者与猎物的关系或种间竞争,却鲜为人知。在这方面,印在巨型哺乳动物化石骨骼上的食肉动物痕迹对于解读生物活动以及由此推断分类群之间潜在的种间关系非常有用。在本文中,我们研究了19世纪和20世纪初在阿根廷潘帕斯地区发掘的收藏于不同欧洲和阿根廷博物馆的历史化石藏品,以便巨型哺乳动物骨骼上的食肉动物痕迹,以提供有关更新世南美洲分类群之间生态关系的关键信息。我们的结果表明,来自潘帕斯地区的巨型动物(如磨齿兽科和箭齿兽科)的长骨上有食肉动物的痕迹。此外,中型物种的长骨和无法确定种类的骨头也有穿刺、凹坑、刻痕和骨折。大型食肉动物群体的成员,如熊科动物、犬科动物甚至猫科动物,被认为是造成这些痕迹的主要因素。我们推测,分析的食肉动物痕迹代表了巨型食草动物尸体被利用的最后阶段,表明在狩猎和/或 scavenging 场景中,这些动物被同一或多个分类群完全消耗。此外,我们的观察提供了新的见解,有助于进一步了解这些独特的巨型哺乳动物群落的古生态关系。 (注:scavenging这个词在文档中可能有误,推测应该是scavenging“食腐”的意思,以上翻译按照这个推测进行)