Departamento de Ecología y Geología, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Málaga, 29071 Málaga, Spain.
Department of Pathology and Anatomical Sciences, Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY 14203, USA.
Sci Adv. 2020 Apr 1;6(14):eaay9462. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.aay9462. eCollection 2020 Apr.
The cave bear is one of the best known extinct large mammals that inhabited Europe during the "Ice Age," becoming extinct ≈24,000 years ago along with other members of the Pleistocene megafauna. Long-standing hypotheses speculate that many cave bears died during their long hibernation periods, which were necessary to overcome the severe and prolonged winters of the Last Glacial. Here, we investigate how long hibernation periods in cave bears would have directly affected their feeding biomechanics using CT-based biomechanical simulations of skulls of cave and extant bears. Our results demonstrate that although large paranasal sinuses were necessary for, and consistent with, long hibernation periods, trade-offs in sinus-associated cranial biomechanical traits restricted cave bears to feed exclusively on low energetic vegetal resources during the predormancy period. This biomechanical trade-off constitutes a new key factor to mechanistically explain the demise of this dominant Pleistocene megafaunal species as a direct consequence of climate cooling.
洞穴熊是在“冰河时代”期间栖息在欧洲的最著名的已灭绝大型哺乳动物之一,大约在 24000 年前与更新世巨型动物群的其他成员一起灭绝。长期以来的假说推测,许多洞穴熊在漫长的冬眠期间死亡,这是克服末次冰期漫长而严酷的冬季所必需的。在这里,我们使用洞穴熊和现生熊的头骨基于 CT 的生物力学模拟来研究长冬眠期如何直接影响它们的进食生物力学。我们的结果表明,尽管大的鼻旁窦对于长冬眠期是必要的,并且与长冬眠期一致,但与窦相关的颅面生物力学特征的权衡限制了洞穴熊在休眠前阶段仅以低能量的植物性资源为食。这种生物力学权衡构成了一个新的关键因素,可以从机械上解释这种占主导地位的更新世巨型动物物种的灭绝,这是气候变冷的直接后果。