Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Gothenburg, Box 461, SE, 40530, Göteborg, Sweden.
Gothenburg Global Biodiversity Centre, Box 461, SE, 40530, Göteborg, Sweden.
Ecol Lett. 2020 Mar;23(3):537-544. doi: 10.1111/ele.13451. Epub 2020 Jan 13.
While the anthropogenic impact on ecosystems today is evident, it remains unclear if the detrimental effect of hominins on co-occurring biodiversity is a recent phenomenon or has also been the pattern for earlier hominin species. We test this using the East African carnivore fossil record. We analyse the diversity of carnivores over the last four million years and investigate whether any decline is related to an increase in hominin cognitive capacity, vegetation changes or climatic changes. We find that extinction rates in large carnivores correlate with increased hominin brain size and with vegetation changes, but not with precipitation or temperature changes. While temporal analyses cannot distinguish between the effects of vegetation changes and hominins, we show through spatial analyses of contemporary carnivores in Africa that only hominin causation is plausible. Our results suggest that substantial anthropogenic influence on biodiversity started millions of years earlier than currently assumed.
虽然今天人类活动对生态系统的影响是明显的,但仍不清楚人类对共存生物多样性的不利影响是最近才出现的现象,还是也存在于早期人类物种中。我们使用东非食肉动物化石记录来检验这一点。我们分析了过去四百万年来食肉动物的多样性,并调查任何减少是否与人类认知能力的增加、植被变化或气候变化有关。我们发现,大型食肉动物的灭绝率与人类大脑尺寸的增加以及与植被变化有关,但与降水或温度变化无关。虽然时间分析不能区分植被变化和人类的影响,但我们通过对非洲当代食肉动物的空间分析表明,只有人类的原因才是合理的。我们的结果表明,人类对生物多样性的巨大影响比目前假设的要早数百万年。