首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Extinction and replacement among predatory mammals in the North American late Eocene and Oligocene: Tracking a paleoguild over twelve million years
Authors:Blaire Van Valkenburgh
Institution:Department of Biology , University of California , Los Angeles, CA, 90024–1606
Abstract:Changes in taxonomic and morphologic diversity within the paleoguild of predatory mammals were explored within a mammalian chronofauna spanning a twelve million year interval, from the latest Eocene to the end of the Oligocene of North America (36–24 ma). The timespan encompassed a modest extinction event among terrestrial mammals (circa 34 ma) followed by a period of relative stability. Morphological diversity was assessed with estimates of body mass, relative tooth size, and tooth shape. Principal component, nearest‐neighbor, and minimum‐spanning‐tree analyses were used to compare morphological diversity and species packing within predator paleoguilds in the mid‐Chadronian (37–34 ma), Orellan (34–32), Whitneyan (32–29.5), and early Arikareean (29.5–24) land mammal ages. Species richness of predators throughout the interval was relatively constant, fluctuating between 15 and 18 total taxa. Moreover, despite significant differences in taxonomic composition and a modest extinction event among terrestrial mammals, morphological diversity within the paleoguild was very similar in the Chadronian and Orellan. In the Whitneyan and especially the early Arikareean, the diversity of feeding adaptations among species declined slightly, largely due to the loss of several highly specialized meat‐eaters (creodonts, nimravids) and the addition of small omnivores (canids).
Keywords:Carnivora  oligocene  chronofauna  dietary diversity  morphology  paleoecology
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号