TY - JOUR
T1 - Combining isotopic and ecomorphological data to refine bovid paleodietary reconstruction
T2 - A case study from the Makapansgat Limeworks hominin locality
AU - Sponheimer, Matt
AU - Reed, Kaye
AU - Lee-Thorp, Julia A.
N1 - Funding Information: This research was funded by the National Science Foundation (MS & KER), the Leakey Foundation (MS & KER), the Wenner-Gren Foundation (MS), the Foundation for Research Development (JLT), the Boise Fund (MS), the Research Committee of the University of Cape Town (JLT), the American Association of University Women (KER), and the Rutgers University Alumni Fund (MS). MS and JLT would like to thank B. Rubidge, C. Gow, and M. Raath of the University of Witwatersrand for access to the fossils, and J. Lanham for help with the mass spec. KER would like to thank E. Vrba for unpublished identifications of many of the bovid specimens of Makapansgat, B. Rubidge and J. Kitching for help in the fossil store at the BPI, Lillian Spencer for many hours of help and discussion, and C. Lockwood for help with DFA. MS also thanks R. Blumenschine, A. Cushing, D. DeRuiter, A. Esterhuysen, A. Field, T. HoVman, K. Kuykendall, Y. Lam, C. Menter, T. Pickering, Y. Rahman, C. Schrire, J. Smith, J. Tactikos and Ivydene for their help and forbearance.
PY - 1999/6
Y1 - 1999/6
N2 - The relationship between environmental change and hominin evolution remains obscure. For the most part, this stems from the difficulty of reconstructing ancient hominin habitats. Bovids are among the most frequently utilized paleoenvironmental indicators, but little is known about the habitat preferences of extinct taxa. It is generally assumed that fossil bovids both ate the same things and occupied the same habitats as their closest extant relatives. We test the first part of this assumption by reconstructing the diets of seven bovids from Makapansgat Limeworks, South Africa. Since diet and habitat are linked, these reconstructions have implications for our understanding of fossil bovid habitat tolerances. Ecomorphological and stable carbon isotope analyses are employed, allowing us to take advantage of the strengths and overcome the weaknesses of both. In most cases, fossil bovids did have similar diets to their extant relatives, and probably occupied similar habitats. Gazella vanhoepeni and Aepyceros sp., however, were almost exclusive browsers, and not mixed feeders like their living counterparts.
AB - The relationship between environmental change and hominin evolution remains obscure. For the most part, this stems from the difficulty of reconstructing ancient hominin habitats. Bovids are among the most frequently utilized paleoenvironmental indicators, but little is known about the habitat preferences of extinct taxa. It is generally assumed that fossil bovids both ate the same things and occupied the same habitats as their closest extant relatives. We test the first part of this assumption by reconstructing the diets of seven bovids from Makapansgat Limeworks, South Africa. Since diet and habitat are linked, these reconstructions have implications for our understanding of fossil bovid habitat tolerances. Ecomorphological and stable carbon isotope analyses are employed, allowing us to take advantage of the strengths and overcome the weaknesses of both. In most cases, fossil bovids did have similar diets to their extant relatives, and probably occupied similar habitats. Gazella vanhoepeni and Aepyceros sp., however, were almost exclusive browsers, and not mixed feeders like their living counterparts.
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U2 - 10.1006/jhev.1999.0300
DO - 10.1006/jhev.1999.0300
M3 - Article
C2 - 10330334
SN - 0047-2484
VL - 36
SP - 705
EP - 718
JO - Journal of human evolution
JF - Journal of human evolution
IS - 6
ER -