Habitat preferences of medium/large mammals in human disturbed forests in Central Japan

2014 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 701-710 ◽  
Author(s):  
Riyou Tsujino ◽  
Takakazu Yumoto
Author(s):  
J. Alan Holman

In Chapter 5 we have seen that Pleistocene herpetofaunas are often used to suggest paleoenvironmental conditions. The present chapter discusses the validity of this use. With the exception of behavioral responses (and a few quasi-physiological adaptations in reptiles), herpetological species are poorly adapted to resist temperature changes. Or, to put it another way, amphibians and reptiles lack the complex internal physiological mechanisms that interact to regulate temperature in endotherms. This has led to the assumption by many that herpetological species, because of their supposed greater sensitivity to temperature changes, arc much better indicators of local thermal conditions than are birds and mammals. Moreover, most Quaternary amphibians and reptiles represent extant species whose ecological tolerances and habitat preferences are well known, whereas many Pleistocene endotherms, especially large mammals, are extinct species whose ecological traits and specific habitat requirements are not totally understood. This suggests that Pleistocene herpetofaunas should give more refined information about specific habitats than endothermic faunas. Also, it can be argued that most amphibian and reptile species are more spatially confined than endothermic ones (especially birds and large mammals) and that Pleistocene herpetological species indicate paleoenvironmental conditions of more restricted areas. Bailón and Rage (1992) address this subject in the light of their European experience: "They (amphibians and reptiles] arc unable to compensate for large climatic variations as endotherms (birds and mammals) can; therefore each amphibian and reptile species can live only in a definite climate." (p. 95). Moreover,… Amphibians and reptiles present another advantage: whereas endotherm vertebrates are represented in Quaternary fossiliferous localities by a not negligible percentage of extinct species, practically all fossil amphibians and reptiles of that age belong to extant species. If a species is extinct its ecological requirements cannot be known with certainty and arc open to speculation whereas living species present in fossiliferous assemblages afford accurate information, (p. 95)… They also state that the size of reptile home ranges is small, and that as these species are not the preferred prey of predaccous birds, they are probably not an admixture of species that live in a wide area around the locality. Let us examine these assumptions.


Paleobiology ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 205-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Palmqvist ◽  
Darren R. Gröcke ◽  
Alfonso Arribas ◽  
Richard A. Fariña

Ecomorphological and biogeochemical (trace element, and carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen isotope ratios) analyses have been used for determining the dietary niches and habitat preferences of large mammals from lower Pleistocene deposits at Venta Micena (Guadix-Baza Basin, Spain). The combination of these two approaches takes advantage of the strengths and overcome the weakness of both approaches. The range of δ13Ccollagen values for ungulate species indicates that C3 plants were dominant in the diet of these mammals. δ13Ccollagen values vary among ungulates: perissodactyls have the lowest values and bovids the highest ones, with cervids showing intermediate values. The hypsodonty index measured in lower molar teeth and the relative length of the lower premolar tooth row indicate that the horse, Equus altidens, was a grazing species, whereas the rhino, Stephanorhinus etruscus, was a mixed feeder in open habitats. The similar δ13Ccollagen values shown in both perissodactyls does not reflect differences in feeding behavior with other ungulates, but rather a lower isotope enrichment factor in these monogastric herbivores than in ruminants, owing to their lower metabolic efficiency. The cervids Eucladoceros giulii and Dama sp. show low hypsodonty values, indicating that they were mixed feeders or browsers from forested habitats, an ecomorphologically based conclusion corroborated in the former by its low δ15Ncollagen content (canopy effect). Bovid species (Bovini aff. Leptobos, Soergelia minor, and Hemitragus albus) presumably inhabited open environments, according to their comparatively high hypsodonty and δ15Ncollagen values. Carnivore species (Homotherium latidens, Megantereon whitei, Pachycrocuta brevirostris, Canis falconeri, and Canis etruscus) exhibit higher δ15Ncollagen values than ungulates. These results record the isotopic enrichment expected with an increase in trophic level and are also supported by low bone Sr.Zn ratios. The elevated δ15Ncollagen value for a sample of Mammuthus meridionalis, which came from an individual with unfused epiphyses, confirms that it was a suckling animal. The δ15Ncollagen value of the scimitar-cat H. latidens is well above that obtained for the young individual of Mammuthus, which indicates that juvenile elephants were an important part of its diet. The hippo, Hippopotamus antiquus, yielded unexpectedly high δ15Ncollagen values, which suggest feeding on aquatic, non-N2-fixing plants. The high δ18Ohydroxyl values of bovids Hemitragus and Soergelia and of cervid Dama indicate that these ungulates obtained most of their water requirements from the vegetation. The megaherbivores and Eucladoceros exhibit the lowest δ18Ohydroxyl values, which suggest increased water dependence for them. Paleosynecological analysis was based on the relative abundance of species of large mammals from different ecological categories, determined by feeding behavior and locomotion types. The comparison of the frequencies of such categories in Venta Micena with those found in modern African communities indicates that the composition of the paleocommunity closely resembles those of savannas with tall grass and shrubs. The net above-ground primary productivity estimated for the on-crop biomass of the mammalian species preserved in the fossil assemblage also yields a figure congruent with that expected for an open environment.


2016 ◽  
Vol 50 (3) ◽  
pp. 227-239 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muga Yaguchi ◽  
Yoichi Muramatsu ◽  
Hitoshi Chiba ◽  
Fumiaki Okumura ◽  
Takeshi Ohba
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