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Ghosts of Yellowstone: Multi-Decadal Histories of Wildlife Populations Captured by Bones on a Modern Landscape

机译:黄石的幽灵:骨头在现代景观上捕获的野生生物种群的十年代历史

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摘要

Natural accumulations of skeletal material (death assemblages) have the potential to provide historical data on species diversity and population structure for regions lacking decades of wildlife monitoring, thereby contributing valuable baseline data for conservation and management strategies. Previous studies of the ecological and temporal resolutions of death assemblages from terrestrial large-mammal communities, however, have largely focused on broad patterns of community composition in tropical settings. Here, I expand the environmental sampling of large-mammal death assemblages into a temperate biome and explore more demanding assessments of ecological fidelity by testing their capacity to record past population fluctuations of individual species in the well-studied ungulate community of Yellowstone National Park (Yellowstone). Despite dramatic ecological changes following the 1988 wildfires and 1995 wolf re-introduction, the Yellowstone death assemblage is highly faithful to the living community in species richness and community structure. These results agree with studies of tropical death assemblages and establish the broad capability of vertebrate remains to provide high-quality ecological data from disparate ecosystems and biomes. Importantly, the Yellowstone death assemblage also correctly identifies species that changed significantly in abundance over the last 20 to ∼80 years and the directions of those shifts (including local invasions and extinctions). The relative frequency of fresh versus weathered bones for individual species is also consistent with documented trends in living population sizes. Radiocarbon dating verifies the historical source of bones from Equus caballus (horse): a functionally extinct species. Bone surveys are a broadly valuable tool for obtaining population trends and baseline shifts over decadal-to-centennial timescales.
机译:骨骼材料的自然积累(死亡组合)可能为缺乏几十年野生动植物监测的地区提供有关物种多样性和种群结构的历史数据,从而为保护和管理战略提供有价值的基准数据。然而,先前关于陆地大型哺乳动物群落死亡组合的生态和时间解析的研究主要集中在热带环境中广泛的群落组成模式。在这里,我将大型哺乳动物死亡组合的环境采样扩展为温带生物群落,并通过测试其记录在黄石国家公园(黄石公园)(黄石公园)有蹄类动物群落中过去记录的单个物种种群波动的能力,探索了对生态保真度的更高要求的评估。 )。尽管在1988年的野火和1995年的狼被重新引入之后,生态发生了戏剧性的变化,但黄石的死亡组合在物种丰富度和社区结构方面对活着的社区高度忠实。这些结果与对热带死亡组合的研究相吻合,并建立了脊椎动物遗骸的广泛能力,可以提供来自不同生态系统和生物群落的高质量生态数据。重要的是,黄石的死亡组合还正确地识别了在过去20至80年间丰度发生了显着变化的物种以及这些变化的方向(包括局部入侵和灭绝)。单个物种的新鲜骨骼与风化骨骼的相对频率也与活着的种群数量趋势相一致。放射性碳测年证实了马属马(功能性已灭绝的物种)的骨骼历史来源。骨调查是获得人口趋势和十年到百年历程基线变化的广泛有价值的工具。

著录项

  • 作者

    Miller, Joshua H.;

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  • 年度 2011
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  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 {"code":"en","name":"English","id":9}
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