Australian Centre for Ancient DNA, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia;
School of Environment, The University of Auckland, Auckland 1142, New Zealand.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2018 Feb 13;115(7):1546-1551. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1712337115.
Over the past 50,000 y, biotic extinctions and declines have left a legacy of vacant niches and broken ecological interactions across global terrestrial ecosystems. Reconstructing the natural, unmodified ecosystems that preceded these events relies on high-resolution analyses of paleoecological deposits. Coprolites are a source of uniquely detailed information about trophic interactions and the behaviors, gut parasite communities, and microbiotas of prehistoric animal species. Such insights are critical for understanding the legacy effects of extinctions on ecosystems, and can help guide contemporary conservation and ecosystem restoration efforts. Here we use high-throughput sequencing (HTS) of ancient eukaryotic DNA from coprolites to reconstruct aspects of the biology and ecology of four species of extinct moa and the critically endangered kakapo parrot from New Zealand (NZ). Importantly, we provide evidence that moa and prehistoric kakapo consumed ectomycorrhizal fungi, suggesting these birds played a role in dispersing fungi that are key to NZ's natural forest ecosystems. We also provide the first DNA-based evidence that moa frequently supplemented their broad diets with ferns and mosses. Finally, we also find parasite taxa that provide insight into moa behavior, and present data supporting the hypothesis of coextinction between moa and several parasite species. Our study demonstrates that HTS sequencing of coprolites provides a powerful tool for resolving key aspects of ancient ecosystems and may rapidly provide information not obtainable by conventional paleoecological techniques, such as fossil analyses.
在过去的 5 万年中,生物灭绝和衰退在全球陆地生态系统中留下了空缺的生态位和破碎的生态相互作用的遗产。要重建这些事件之前的自然、未经修饰的生态系统,需要对古生态学沉积物进行高分辨率分析。粪化石是关于营养相互作用以及史前动物物种的行为、肠道寄生虫群落和微生物组的独特详细信息的来源。这些见解对于了解灭绝对生态系统的遗留影响至关重要,并有助于指导当代保护和生态系统恢复工作。在这里,我们使用粪化石中古老真核生物 DNA 的高通量测序 (HTS) 来重建四种灭绝的恐鸟和新西兰(NZ)极度濒危的鸮鹦鹉的生物学和生态学的各个方面。重要的是,我们提供了恐鸟和史前鸮鹦鹉食用外生菌根真菌的证据,这表明这些鸟类在传播对新西兰自然森林生态系统至关重要的真菌方面发挥了作用。我们还提供了恐鸟经常用蕨类植物和苔藓补充其广泛饮食的第一个基于 DNA 的证据。最后,我们还发现了寄生虫类群,这些寄生虫类群为了解恐鸟的行为提供了线索,并提供了支持恐鸟和几种寄生虫物种共同灭绝的假设的数据。我们的研究表明,粪化石的 HTS 测序为解决古代生态系统的关键方面提供了一种强大的工具,并且可能会迅速提供常规古生态学技术(如化石分析)无法获得的信息。