scholarly journals A bone bed reveals mass death of herd of giant ground sloths

Nature ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 577 (7792) ◽  
pp. 600-600
Keyword(s):  
2017 ◽  
Vol 29 (8) ◽  
pp. 1065-1075 ◽  
Author(s):  
Santiago J. Patiño ◽  
Richard A. Fariña
Keyword(s):  

2015 ◽  
Vol 113 (4) ◽  
pp. 862-867 ◽  
Author(s):  
Blaire Van Valkenburgh ◽  
Matthew W. Hayward ◽  
William J. Ripple ◽  
Carlo Meloro ◽  
V. Louise Roth

Large mammalian terrestrial herbivores, such as elephants, have dramatic effects on the ecosystems they inhabit and at high population densities their environmental impacts can be devastating. Pleistocene terrestrial ecosystems included a much greater diversity of megaherbivores (e.g., mammoths, mastodons, giant ground sloths) and thus a greater potential for widespread habitat degradation if population sizes were not limited. Nevertheless, based on modern observations, it is generally believed that populations of megaherbivores (>800 kg) are largely immune to the effects of predation and this perception has been extended into the Pleistocene. However, as shown here, the species richness of big carnivores was greater in the Pleistocene and many of them were significantly larger than their modern counterparts. Fossil evidence suggests that interspecific competition among carnivores was relatively intense and reveals that some individuals specialized in consuming megaherbivores. To estimate the potential impact of Pleistocene large carnivores, we use both historic and modern data on predator–prey body mass relationships to predict size ranges of their typical and maximum prey when hunting as individuals and in groups. These prey size ranges are then compared with estimates of juvenile and subadult proboscidean body sizes derived from extant elephant growth data. Young proboscideans at their most vulnerable age fall within the predicted prey size ranges of many of the Pleistocene carnivores. Predation on juveniles can have a greater impact on megaherbivores because of their long interbirth intervals, and consequently, we argue that Pleistocene carnivores had the capacity to, and likely did, limit megaherbivore population sizes.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. e0139611 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Buckley ◽  
Richard A. Fariña ◽  
Craig Lawless ◽  
P. Sebastián Tambusso ◽  
Luciano Varela ◽  
...  

1992 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 107-107
Author(s):  
Timothy J. Gaudin ◽  
William D. Turnbull

The mammalian order Xenarthra (including the living Neotropical armadillos, anteaters, and tree sloths) has figured importantly in recent hypotheses of interordinal relationships among eutherian mammals. It has been suggested that the group shares a common ancestry both with the extant Old World order Pholidota (i.e. the pangolins or scaly-anteaters) and the extinct North American group Palaeanodonta. Furthermore, these three groups have been linked together into a monophyletic Cohort Edentata, which has been hypothesized to represent the sister-group to all other eutherians. This placement of edentates relative to the remainder of Eutheria has been supported in part by a purported difference in the morphology of the stapes in the two groups- edentates possessing a primitive, imperforate/columelliform morphology, other placentals a derived, perforate/stirrup-shaped morphology.A recent study of stapedial morphology among mammals by Novacek and Wyss (1986) suggests that within the Xenarthra itself a perforate stapes is found among armadillos, but that the pilosa in particular (the clade including anteaters and sloths) and the order as a whole are characterized primitively by an imperforate stapes. Our studies of the xenarthran ear region (Patterson et al., in press) have uncovered new ontogenetic and paleontological evidence which contradict the findings of Novacek and Wyss. Among adults of the two extant tree sloth genera, the stapes lacks a stapedial foramen. However, in both genera, this adult imperforate morphology is derived from a perforated juvenile stapes. Novacek and Wyss ignored fossil species in their consideration of the xenarthran stapes. It has long been known that extinct ground sloths of the family Mylodontidae possessed a large stapedial foramen. Unfortunately, until now no stapes were known from the remaining ground sloth families, the Megatheriidae and the Megalonychidae. We have uncovered a complete left stapes of an early Miocene megatheriid ground sloth Eucholoeops ingens. This stapes possesses a well-developed stapedial foramen. We believe that this new paleontological evidence, combined with our information on the ontogeny of the stapes in the living genera, clearly indicates that a perforate stapes is primitive for sloths. Moreover, when we plot distributions of stapedial morphologies of both living and fossil edentates onto a phylogeny of the Edentata, we can demonstrate that the a large stapedial foramen is primitive for the Xenarthra as a whole, and probably for the entire Cohort Edentata. Such a distribution makes it unlikely that stapedial morphology can be used to separate edentates from other eutherian mammals.


Radiocarbon ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 693-700 ◽  
Author(s):  
Austin Long ◽  
Paul S. Martin ◽  
Humberto A. Lagiglia

A new set of radiocarbon dates from a rockshelter in Mendoza, Argentina addresses the question of the temporal overlap between the presence of an unidentified extinct ground sloth (cf., Mylodontidae) and evidence of human activity. Dung balls on the cave floor, evidently deposited by sloth, are overlain by charcoal, apparently of cultural origin. 14C dates, mostly on charcoal and dung from this shelter, calibrated using recently published curves, as well as the stratigraphy of the deposits from which the samples were collected, suggest that any co-occurrence of humans and ground sloths in this region was brief. In contrast, the single date on mylodon dermal ossicles from this shelter suggests significant time overlap. Replication of this date as well as obtaining new high-precision 14C analyses from this site will be the next priority.


2014 ◽  
Vol 88 (3) ◽  
pp. 434-443 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald R. Prothero ◽  
Kenneth E. Campbell ◽  
Brian L. Beatty ◽  
Carl D. Frailey

A new dromomerycine palaeomerycid artiodactyl, Surameryx acrensis new genus new species, from upper Miocene deposits of the Amazon Basin documents the first and only known occurrence of this Northern Hemisphere group in South America. Osteological characters place the new taxon among the earliest known dromomerycine artiodactyls, most similar to Barbouromeryx trigonocorneus, which lived in North America during the early to middle Miocene, 20–16 Ma. Although it has long been assumed that the Great American Biotic Interchange (GABI) began with the closure of the Isthmus of Panama in the late Pliocene, or ca. 3.0–2.5 Ma, the presence of this North American immigrant in Amazonia is further evidence that terrestrial connections between North America and South America through Panama existed as early as the early late Miocene, or ca. 9.5 Ma. This early interchange date was previously indicated by approximately coeval specimens of proboscideans, peccaries, and tapirs in South America and ground sloths in North America. Although palaeomerycids apparently never flourished in South America, proboscideans thrived there until the end of the Pleistocene, and peccaries and tapirs diversified and still live there today.


2013 ◽  
Vol 79 (2) ◽  
pp. 215-227 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Gregory McDonald ◽  
Robert G. Dundas ◽  
James C. Chatters

AbstractThe Fairmead Landfill locality contains a diverse middle Irvingtonian, (0.78–0.55 Ma), vertebrate fauna that includes three sloths, Megalonyx wheatleyi, Nothrotheriops shastensis and Paramylodon harlani. The co-occurrence of these three genera in a single fauna is relatively rare in both the Irvingtonian and Rancholabrean and this is only the fourth documented Irvingtonian fauna to contain all three sloth genera. The presence of the three different sloths, each of which had different ecological requirements, indicates the presence of a variety of different habitats at this time and a heterogeneous landscape. Preliminary analysis of pollen from the site supports the interpretation of the existence of a mosaic of plant communities, but a landscape dominated by a mesic grassland. This interpretation is also supported by the total faunal diversity that includes taxa associated with woodlands as well as open habitat and taphonomic differences in the preservation and relative abundance of the different sloths. Evolutionarily the Fairmead Landfill sloths show a suite of morphological, size and proportional characters that indicate they represent transitional populations between older and younger members of their respective lineages.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eli Amson ◽  
John A Nyakatura

ABSTRACTTrabecular architecture (i.e., the main orientation of the bone trabeculae, their number, mean thickness, spacing, etc.) has been shown experimentally to adapt with great accuracy and sensitivity to the loadings applied to the bone during life. However, the potential of trabecular parameters used as a proxy for the mechanical environment of an organism’s organ to help reconstruct the lifestyle of extinct taxa has only recently started to be exploited. Furthermore, these parameters are rarely combined to the long-used mid-diaphyseal parameters to inform such reconstructions. Here we investigate xenarthrans, for which functional and ecological reconstructions of extinct forms are particularly important in order to improve our macroevolutionary understanding of their main constitutive clades, i.e., the Tardigrada (sloths), Vermilingua (anteaters), and Cingulata (armadillos and extinct close relatives). The lifestyles of modern xenarthrans can be classified as fully terrestrial and highly fossorial (armadillos), arboreal (partly to fully) and hook-and-pull digging (anteaters), or suspensory (fully arboreal) and non-fossorial (sloths). The degree of arboreality and fossoriality of some extinct forms, “ground sloths” in particular, is highly debated. We used high-resolution computed tomography to compare the epiphyseal 3D architecture and mid-diaphyseal structure of the forelimb bones of extant and extinct xenarthrans. The comparative approach employed aims at inferring the most probable lifestyle of extinct taxa, using phylogenetically informed discriminant analyses. Several challenges preventing the attribution of one of the extant xenarthran lifestyles to the sampled extinct sloths were identified. Differing from that of the larger “ground sloths”, the bone structure of the small-sized Hapalops (Miocene of Argentina), however, was found as significantly more similar to that of extant sloths, even when accounting for the phylogenetic signal.


2019 ◽  
Vol 81 (4) ◽  
pp. 229-233 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcel Robischon

In organismic biology, the formation of ecological and evolutionary hypotheses on the basis of observable morphologies is a central element of research, and by extension of teaching and learning. Often it is necessary to take account of complex combinations of factors, some of which may be far from obvious. In the work described here, hypothesis formation and testing was exercised and studied in a learner-centered and object-based manner using an anachronistic, seemingly “nonsensical” plant, Maclura pomifera (Moraceae), in which the link between structure and function only becomes clear when considering past faunistic environments. The element of the unexpected and the allure of the large animals is thought to add to epistemic curiosity and student motivation to engage in the study of plants.


2012 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 102-117 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luis Alberto Borrero ◽  
Fabiana María Martin
Keyword(s):  

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