Bochaton Corentin, Paradis Emmanuel, Bailon Salvador, Grouard Sandrine, Ineich Ivan, Lenoble Arnaud, Lorvelec Olivier, Tresset Anne, Boivin Nicole
Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Kahlaische Straße 10, D-07745 Jena, Germany.
Laboratoire "Archéozoologie et Archéobotanique: Sociétés, Pratiques et Environnements" UMR 7209-CNRS, MNHN-Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle-Sorbonne Universités, 55 rue Buffon, CP 56, 75005 Paris, France.
Sci Adv. 2021 May 19;7(21). doi: 10.1126/sciadv.abg2111. Print 2021 May.
Large-scale extinction is one of the defining challenges of our time, as human processes fundamentally and irreversibly reshape global ecosystems. While the extinction of large animals with popular appeal garners widespread public and research interest, the importance of smaller, less "charismatic" species to ecosystem health is increasingly recognized. Benefitting from systematically collected fossil and archaeological archives, we examined snake and lizard extinctions in the Guadeloupe Islands of the Caribbean. Study of 43,000 bone remains across six islands revealed a massive extinction of 50 to 70% of Guadeloupe's snakes and lizards following European colonization. In contrast, earlier Indigenous populations coexisted with snakes and lizards for thousands of years without affecting their diversity. Study of archaeological remains provides insights into the causes of snake and lizard extinctions and shows that failure to consider fossil-derived data probably contributes to substantial underestimation of human impacts to global biodiversity.
大规模灭绝是我们这个时代的决定性挑战之一,因为人类活动从根本上且不可逆转地重塑了全球生态系统。虽然具有大众吸引力的大型动物灭绝引发了广泛的公众和研究兴趣,但体型较小、缺乏“魅力”的物种对生态系统健康的重要性也日益得到认可。借助系统收集的化石和考古档案,我们研究了加勒比地区瓜德罗普群岛的蛇和蜥蜴灭绝情况。对六个岛屿上4.3万块骨骼残骸的研究表明,欧洲殖民之后,瓜德罗普群岛50%至70%的蛇和蜥蜴大量灭绝。相比之下,早期的原住民与蛇和蜥蜴共存了数千年,并未影响它们的多样性。对考古遗迹的研究有助于深入了解蛇和蜥蜴灭绝的原因,并表明未能考虑来自化石的数据可能会导致对人类对全球生物多样性影响的严重低估。