Mammal Research Institute, Polish Academy of Sciences, Białowieża, Poland.
Department of Geosciences, Research Area Paleobiology, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
Glob Chang Biol. 2019 Sep;25(9):2915-2930. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14733. Epub 2019 Jul 12.
Climate warming and human landscape transformation during the Holocene resulted in environmental changes for wild animals. The last remnants of the European Pleistocene megafauna that survived into the Holocene were particularly vulnerable to changes in habitat. To track the response of habitat use and foraging of large herbivores to natural and anthropogenic changes in environmental conditions during the Holocene, we investigated carbon (δ C) and nitrogen (δ N) stable isotope composition in bone collagen of moose (Alces alces), European bison (Bison bonasus) and aurochs (Bos primigenius) in Central and Eastern Europe. We found strong variations in isotope compositions in the studied species throughout the Holocene and diverse responses to changing environmental conditions. All three species showed significant changes in their δ C values reflecting a shift of foraging habitats from more open in the Early and pre-Neolithic Holocene to more forest during the Neolithic and Late Holocene. This shift was strongest in European bison, suggesting higher plasticity, more limited in moose, and the least in aurochs. Significant increases of δ N values in European bison and moose are evidence of a diet change towards more grazing, but may also reflect increased nitrogen in soils following deglaciation and global temperature increases. Among the factors explaining the observed isotope variations were time (age of samples), longitude and elevation in European bison, and time, longitude and forest cover in aurochs. None of the analysed factors explained isotope variations in moose. Our results demonstrate the strong influence of natural (forest expansion) and anthropogenic (deforestation and human pressure) changes on the foraging ecology of large herbivores, with forests playing a major role as a refugial habitat since the Neolithic, particularly for European bison and aurochs. We propose that high flexibility in foraging strategy was the key for survival of large herbivores in the changing environmental conditions of the Holocene.
全新世的气候变暖与人类景观改造导致野生动物的环境发生变化。那些幸存到全新世的欧洲更新世巨型动物的最后残余物尤其容易受到栖息地变化的影响。为了追踪大型食草动物对全新世环境条件自然和人为变化的生境利用和觅食反应,我们研究了中欧和东欧的驼鹿(Alces alces)、欧洲野牛(Bison bonasus)和原牛(Bos primigenius)的骨骼胶原中的碳(δC)和氮(δN)稳定同位素组成。我们发现,在所研究的物种中,同位素组成在全新世期间存在强烈变化,并对环境条件的变化表现出不同的反应。所有三个物种的δC 值都发生了显著变化,反映出觅食生境从全新世早期和新石器前时期的更开阔地区向新石器时期和全新世晚期的更森林地区的转变。这种转变在欧洲野牛中最为强烈,表明其可塑性更高,在驼鹿中受到的限制更多,在原牛中则最小。欧洲野牛和驼鹿的δN 值显著增加,表明它们的饮食向更多的放牧转变,但也可能反映了冰川消融和全球气温升高后土壤中氮含量的增加。解释观察到的同位素变化的因素包括时间(样本年龄)、欧洲野牛的经度和海拔,以及原牛的时间、经度和森林覆盖率。在分析的因素中,没有一个因素可以解释驼鹿的同位素变化。我们的研究结果表明,自然因素(森林扩张)和人为因素(森林砍伐和人类压力)对大型食草动物的觅食生态有强烈影响,森林自新石器时代以来一直扮演着主要避难所的角色,尤其是对欧洲野牛和原牛而言。我们认为,在全新世不断变化的环境条件下,觅食策略的高度灵活性是大型食草动物生存的关键。