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Carnivoran resource and habitat use in the context of a Late Miocene faunal turnover episode
Authors:Laura Domingo  M. Soledad Domingo  Paul L. Koch  Jorge Morales  M. Teresa Alberdi
Affiliation:1. Departamento de Geología Sedimentaria y Cambio Medioambiental, Instituto de Geociencias (CSIC‐UCM), Madrid, 28040 Spain;2. Departamento de Paleontología, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Madrid, 28040 Spain;3. Earth & Planetary Sciences Department, University of California Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA, 95064 USA;4. Departamento de Ecología Evolutiva, Estación Biológica de Do?ana‐CSIC, Sevilla, 41092 Spain;5. Departamento de Paleobiología, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales‐CSIC, Madrid, 28006 Spain
Abstract:We investigate resource and habitat use by apex predators through stable isotope analysis at two Spanish Late Miocene localities: Los Valles de Fuentidueña (~9.6 Ma, LVF) and Cerro de los Batallones (~9.1 Ma, BAT). The temporal window represented by LVF and BAT was crucial in the shaping of the current Iberian mammalian structure because it corresponds to the initial stages of a faunal turnover episode and regional environmental change at ~9.5–8.5 Ma (Vallesian–Turolian transition), associated with an increase in the seasonality of precipitation. Herbivore and carnivore δ13C and δ18O values do not point to significant changes in either the vegetation cover (a woodland to mesic C3 grassland) or the hydrological regime during the time lapse represented between LVF and BAT. This suggests that the environmental shift recorded around the Vallesian–Turolian boundary may have occurred later in time, since LVF and BAT ages are synchronic with the onset of the turnover event. From the standpoint of predator–prey evaluation by means of stable isotope analysis, statistical post hoc tests, mixing model output, and the assessment of niche occupation by LVF and BAT carnivores point to high levels of interspecific competition among large active carnivores, albeit some genera, such as the amphicyonid Magericyon and specially the hyaenid Lycyaena, seemed to avoid competition by taking prey from a more open habitat. Despite the drop in diversity and change in faunal components observed between the LVF and BAT assemblages, a high degree of resource and habitat competition is evident from stable isotope data.
Keywords:stable isotopes  resource and habitat use  predator–  prey interactions  Late Miocene  Iberian Peninsula
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