학술논문

Feeding ecology and habitat preferences of top predators from two Miocene carnivore-rich assemblages
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Paleobiology. 42(3):489-507
Subject
11|Paleontology - vertebrate
02D|Geochemistry - isotopes
Amphicyonidae
C-13/C-12
carbon
Carnivora
carnivorous taxa
Cenozoic
Cerro de los Batallones
chemical composition
Chordata
diet
Eomellivora piveteaui
Europe
Eutheria
feeding
Felidae
Fissipeda
habitat
Iberian Peninsula
Indarctos arctoides
isotope ratios
isotopes
Machairodus aphanistus
Madrid Basin
Madrid Spain
Magericyon anceps
Mammalia
Miocene
Mustelidae
Neogene
paleoecology
predation
Promegantereon ogygia
Southern Europe
Spain
stable isotopes
statistical analysis
teeth
Tertiary
Tetrapoda
Thaumastocyon
Theria
Torrejon de Velasco Spain
Ursidae
Vallesian
Vertebrata
Language
English
ISSN
0094-8373
Abstract
Carnivore-rich fossil sites are uncommon in the fossil record and, accordingly, provide valuable opportunities to study predators from vantages that are rarely applied to ancient faunas. Through stable isotopes of carbon and a Bayesian mixing model, we analyze time-successive (nearly contemporaneous), late Miocene carnivoran populations from two fossil sites (Batallones-1 and Batallones-3) from central Spain. Stable isotopes of carbon in tooth enamel provide a reliable and direct methodology to track ancient diets. These two carnivoran-dominated fossil sites display differences in the composition and abundance of the carnivoran species, with some species present at both sites and some present only at one site. This disparity has been interpreted as the consequence of habitat differences between Batallones-1, the older site, and Batallones-3, the younger site. However, carbon isotope values of carnivore and herbivore tooth enamel suggest a common habitat of C3 woodland originally present at both sites. The differences in the carnivoran faunas rather may be the consequence of the dynamics of species entrance and exit from the Madrid Basin during the time elapsed between Batallones-1 and Batallones-3 and changes in population densities due to biotic factors. We infer higher levels of interspecific competition in Batallones-3 than in Batallones-1 because of the larger number of similar-sized, sympatric predators; the clear overlap in their δ13C values (except for the amphicyonid Magericyon anceps); and similarity of their preferred prey: the hipparionine horses. Finally, carbon stable isotopic composition of Indarctos arctoides teeth implies that this ursid was a carnivorous omnivore rather than a herbivorous omnivore. This work demonstrates the insights that stable isotopes can provide in characterizing the feeding ecology and trophic interactions of ancient carnivoran taxa.