|

Under
Embargo Till: 19:00 UTC November 19, 2009 Posted:
19:00 UTC 11/19/2009
After
Mastodons and Mammoths, a Transformed Landscape
Thursday, November 19, 2009

Roughly
15,000 years ago, at the end of the last ice age, North America’s
vast assemblage of large animals — including such iconic
creatures as mammoths, mastodons, camels, horses, ground sloths
and giant beavers — began their precipitous slide to
extinction.
And when their populations crashed, emptying a
land whose diversity of large animals equaled or surpassed
Africa’s wildlife-rich Serengeti plains then or now, an
entirely novel ecosystem emerged as broadleaved trees once kept
in check by huge numbers of big herbivores claimed the landscape.
Soon after, the accumulation of woody debris sparked a dramatic
increase in the prevalence of wildfire, another key shaper of
landscapes.
This new picture of the ecological upheaval of
the North American landscape just after the retreat of the ice
sheets is detailed in a study published today (Nov. 19) in the
journal Science. The study, led by researchers from the
University of Wisconsin-Madison, uses fossil pollen, charcoal and
dung fungus spores to paint a picture of a post-ice age terrain
different from anything in the world today.
The work is
important because it is “the clearest evidence to date that
the extinction of a broad guild of animals had effects on other
parts of these ancient ecosystems,” says John W. Williams,
a UW-Madison professor of geography and an expert on ancient
climates and ecosystems who is the study’s senior author.
What’s more, he says, the detailing of changes on the ice
age landscape following the crash of keystone animal populations
can provide critical insight into the broader effects of animals
disappearing from modern landscapes.
The study was led by
Jacquelyn Gill, a graduate student in Williams’ lab. Other
co-authors are Stephen T. Jackson of the University of Wyoming,
Katherine B. Lininger of UW-Madison and Guy S. Robinson of
Fordham University.
The new work, says Gill, informs but
does not resolve the debate over what caused the extinction of 34
genera or groups of large animals, including icons of the ice age
such as elephant like mastodons and ground sloths the size of
sport utility vehicles. “Our data are not consistent with a
rapid, ‘blitzkrieg’ overkill of large animals by
humans,” notes Gill, nor was their decline due to a loss of
habitat.
However, the work does seem to rule out a recent
hypothesis that a meteor or comet impact some 12.9 thousand years
ago was responsible for the extinction of ice age North America’s
signature large animals.
The study was conducted using
lake sediment cores obtained from Appleman Lake in Indiana, as
well as data obtained previously by Robinson from sites in New
York. Gill, Williams and their colleagues used pollen, charcoal
and the spores of a dung fungus that requires passage through a
mammalian intestinal tract to complete its life cycle to
reconstruct a picture of sweeping change to the ice age
environment. The decline of North America’s signature ice
age mammals was a gradual process, the Wisconsin researchers
explain, taking about 1,000 years. The decline in the huge
numbers of ice age animals is preserved in the fossil record when
the fungal spores disappear from the record altogether: “About
13.8 thousand years ago, the number of spores drops dramatically.
They’re barely in the record anymore,” Gill
explains.
Like detectives reconstructing a crime scene,
the group’s use of dung fungus spores helps establish a
precise sequence of events, showing that the crash of ice age
megafauna began before plant communities started to change and
before fires appeared widely on the landscape.
“The
data suggest that the megafaunal decline and extinction began at
the Appleman Lake site sometime between 14.8 thousand and 13.7
thousand years ago and preceded major shifts in plant community
composition and the frequency of fire,” notes
Williams.
Absent the large herbivores that kept them in
check, such tree species as black ash, elm and ironwood began to
colonize a landscape dominated by coniferous trees such as spruce
and larch. The resulting mix of boreal and temperate trees formed
a plant community unlike any observed today.
“As
soon as herbivores drop off the landscape, we see different plant
communities,” Gill explains, noting that mastodon herds and
other large animals occupied a parkland like landscape, typified
by large open spaces and patches of forest and swamp. “Our
data suggest that these trees would have been abundant sooner if
the herbivores hadn’t been there to eat them.”
While
both the extinction of North America’s ice age megafauna
and the sweeping change to the landscape are well-documented
phenomena, there was, until now, no detailed chronology of the
events that remade the continent’s biological communities
beginning about 14.8 thousand years ago. Establishing that the
disappearance of mammoths, giant beavers, ground sloths and other
large animals preceded the massive change in plant communities,
promises scientists critical new insight into the dynamics of
extinction and its pervasive influence on a given landscape.
The
new study was funded by the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation,
the UW-Madison Center for Climatic Research in the Nelson
Institute for Environmental Studies, and the National Science
Foundation.
Image Caption:
Mastodons graze on black ash trees in a pleistocene swamp. A new
study by researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison shows
that the disappearance of North America's large herbivores not
long after the retreat of the ice sheets that covered much of the
continent triggered a dramatic reshaping of the landscape.
Image Credit: Barry
Roal Carlsen / University of Wisconsin, Madison
Source: University
of Wisconsin, Madison
Permalink:
http://www.sflorg.com/comm_center/unv_science/p947_249.html
Time
Stamp: 11/19/2009 at 19:00:00 UTC
|
RSS
FEEDS
Scientific
Frontline®
The
Comm Center
The
E.A.R.®
World
News Report
Space
Weather Alerts
Stellar
Nights®
Cassini
Gallery
Mars
Gallery
Missions
Gallery
Observatories
Gallery
Exploration
Gallery
Aviation
Gallery
Nature
Trail Gallery
Scientific
Frontline®
Is
supported in part by “Readers Like You”
|