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Process-explicit models reveal pathway to extinction for woolly mammoth using pattern-oriented validation
Authors:Damien A Fordham  Stuart C Brown  H Reit Akakaya  Barry W Brook  Sean Haythorne  Andrea Manica  Kevin T Shoemaker  Jeremy J Austin  Benjamin Blonder  Julia Pilowsky  Carsten Rahbek  David Nogues-Bravo
Institution:Damien A. Fordham,Stuart C. Brown,H. Reşit Akçakaya,Barry W. Brook,Sean Haythorne,Andrea Manica,Kevin T. Shoemaker,Jeremy J. Austin,Benjamin Blonder,Julia Pilowsky,Carsten Rahbek,David Nogues-Bravo
Abstract:Pathways to extinction start long before the death of the last individual. However, causes of early stage population declines and the susceptibility of small residual populations to extirpation are typically studied in isolation. Using validated process-explicit models, we disentangle the ecological mechanisms and threats that were integral in the initial decline and later extinction of the woolly mammoth. We show that reconciling ancient DNA data on woolly mammoth population decline with fossil evidence of location and timing of extinction requires process-explicit models with specific demographic and niche constraints, and a constrained synergy of climatic change and human impacts. Validated models needed humans to hasten climate-driven population declines by many millennia, and to allow woolly mammoths to persist in mainland Arctic refugia until the mid-Holocene. Our results show that the role of humans in the extinction dynamics of woolly mammoth began well before the Holocene, exerting lasting effects on the spatial pattern and timing of its range-wide extinction.
Keywords:climate change  ecological process  extinction dynamics  mechanistic model  megafauna  metapopulation  Pleistocene-Holocene transition  population model  range dynamics  synergistic threats
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