Date:
September 20, 2019
Source:
University of Arkansas
As part of an international research group
based at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History, anthropology assistant
professor Amelia Villaseñor contributed to a large, multi-institutional study
explaining how the human-influenced mass extinction of giant carnivores and
herbivores of North America fundamentally changed the biodiversity and
landscape of the continent.
In their study published today in Science,
researchers from Australia, the United States, Canada and Finland showed that
humans shaped the processes underlying how species co-existed for the last
several thousand years. Smaller, surviving animals such as deer changed their
ecological interactions, the researchers found, causing ecological upheaval
across the continent.
The researchers' work has implications for
conservation of today's remaining large animals, now threatened by another
human-led mass extinction.
The study's primary author is Anikó Tóth at
Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. Tóth collaborated with Villaseñor
and several other researchers at the Smithsonian's Evolution of Terrestrial
Ecosystems Program, as well as researchers at other institutions.
Tóth and the co-authors focused on how
large mammals were distributed across the continent in the Pleistocene and
Holocene geological epochs. (The Pleistocene Epoch occurred from about 2.5
million to 11,700 years ago. Starting at the end of the Pleistocene, the
Holocene is the current geological epoch.) To do this, the researchers analyzed
how often pairs of species were found living in the same community or in
different communities.
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