Department of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA.
Key Laboratory of Vertebrate Evolution and Human Origins, Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
Oecologia. 2024 Mar;204(3):467-489. doi: 10.1007/s00442-024-05532-z. Epub 2024 Mar 22.
Paleoenvironmental reconstructions of fossil sites based on isotopic analyses of enamel typically rely on data from multiple herbivore taxa, with the assumption that this dietary spectrum represents the community's isotopic range and provides insights into local or regional vegetation patterns. However, it remains unclear how representative the sampled taxa are of the broader herbivore community and how well these data correspond to specific ecosystems. Verifying these underlying assumptions is essential to refining the utility of enamel isotopic values for paleoenvironmental reconstructions. This study explores potential links between modern herbivore community carbon isotopic enamel spectra, biome types, and climate in sub-Saharan Africa. This region is one of the most comprehensively isotopically sampled areas globally and is of particular relevance to hominin evolution. Our extensive data compilation reveals that published enamel isotopic data from sub-Saharan Africa typically sample only a small percentage of the taxa documented at most localities and that some biome types (e.g., subtropical savannas) are dramatically overrepresented relative to others (e.g., forests) in these modern data sets. Multiple statistical analyses, including linear models and cluster analyses, revealed weak relationships of associated mammalian herbivore enamel isotopic values, biome type, and climate parameters. These results confound any simple assumptions about how community isotopic profiles map onto specific environments, highlighting the need for more precise strategic approaches in extending isotopic frameworks into the past for paleoecological reconstructions. Developing more refined modern analogs will ultimately allow us to more accurately characterize the isotopic spectra of paleo-communities and link isotopic dietary signatures to specific ecosystems.
基于牙釉质同位素分析的化石遗址古环境重建通常依赖于多种食草动物分类群的数据,假设这种饮食范围代表了群落的同位素范围,并提供了关于当地或区域植被模式的见解。然而,目前尚不清楚所采样的分类群在多大程度上代表了更广泛的食草动物群落,以及这些数据与特定生态系统的对应程度如何。验证这些基本假设对于完善牙釉质同位素值在古环境重建中的应用至关重要。本研究探讨了现代食草动物群落碳同位素牙釉质谱、生物群落类型和气候之间在撒哈拉以南非洲的潜在联系。该地区是全球同位素采样最全面的地区之一,对人类进化尤其重要。我们广泛的数据汇编表明,撒哈拉以南非洲发表的牙釉质同位素数据通常只采样了大多数地点记录的分类群的一小部分,而且在这些现代数据集中,某些生物群落类型(如亚热带草原)相对于其他类型(如森林)被显著夸大。包括线性模型和聚类分析在内的多项统计分析揭示了相关哺乳动物食草动物牙釉质同位素值、生物群落类型和气候参数之间的弱关系。这些结果混淆了任何关于群落同位素分布与特定环境之间的简单假设,突出了在将同位素框架扩展到过去进行古生态重建时需要更精确的策略方法。开发更精细的现代类比最终将使我们能够更准确地描述古群落的同位素谱,并将同位素饮食特征与特定生态系统联系起来。