18 August 2010
A massive reduction in grasslands and the spread of forests may have been the primary cause of the decline of mammals such as the woolly mammoth, woolly rhino and cave lion, according to Durham University scientists.Illustration of Pleistocene hunters. Copyright Natural History Museum.The research is part of the most comprehensive study to date of Northern Hemisphere climate and vegetation during and after the height of the last Ice Age, 21,000 years ago. It shows that, over a huge part of the Earth's surface, there was a massive decline in the productivity and extent of grasslands due to climatic warming and the spread of forests.
These habitat changes made grazing much more difficult for large mammals and dramatically reduced the amount of food available for them. The changes in grassland quality and availability coincided with increases in the distribution and abundance of modern man, Homo sapiens, ensuring a time of wide-scale upheaval for herbivorous mammals and other mammals that preyed on them.
The decrease in productivity and extent of grassland is likely to have been the major contributor to the extinction of many large mammals across most of northern Eurasia and north-western North America by about 11,400 years ago, the onset of the present warm interglacial period. Although some species held on for several thousand years longer in very limited localities, their fate had effectively been sealed.
Professor Brian Huntley, from the School of Biological & Biomedical Sciences at Durham University, said, "Woolly mammoths retreated to northern Siberia 14,000 years ago whereas they had roamed and munched their way across many parts of Europe, including the UK, for most of the previous 100,000 years or more.
"The change from productive grasslands across large areas of northern Eurasia, Alaska and Yukon to less productive tundra-like habitats had a huge effect on many species, particularly on the large herbivores like the woolly rhinoceros and woolly mammoth. Mammoths and other mega-mammals found it increasingly difficult to find food.
"We believe that the loss of food supplies from productive grasslands was the major contributing factor to the extinction of these mega-mammals."
The team, led by Durham University and including scientists from the Natural History Museum, London; Lund University, Sweden, and Bristol University, publish their results in the prestigious scientific journal Quaternary Science Reviews.
Their study, funded by the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), looked at ancient pollen records and they also simulated developments in vegetation and habitat linked to climatic change, during and following the last glacial stage.
The team looked at results for a vast geographic area including Eurasia (Europe and northern Asia) and the area of the Bering land bridge that connected Alaska (USA) and the Yukon (Canada) to Siberia, Russia at the height of the last glacial.
Illustration of a woolly mammoth, Mammuthus primigenius. Copyright Natural History Museum.Different theories exist for the cause of the extinction of mega-species like the mammoth. The rise of modern man, Homo sapiens, is cited by some as a potential cause.
Environmental changes have also been considered as a potential factor in the extinction of mega-herbivores such as the mammoth. This new evidence of massive habitat change linked to climatic change is, according to experts, a parable for modern times.
Professor Huntley said, "This was a time of major environmental change and losses of habitat that may have led to the extinction of herbivores and other mega-species that roamed many parts of the planet.
"This is a model for what may happen as a result of rapid climate change over the next century linked to human activity. It is food for thought in these times of global warming and human-induced habitat change. There may well be a lesson to learn."
The big species today, such as elephants and rhinoceros, are the ones that are most likely to be the first affected by climate change and habitat pressure.
Five species formerly present in Europe, northern Asia, Alaska and Yukon that became globally extinct as grassland diminished:
Woolly mammothCave lionGiant deerWoolly rhinoCave bearFive species that survived as grassland diminished:
Brown bearElk (moose)ReindeerSaiga antelopeMusk oxFurther informationNERC Press Office
Natural Environment Research Council
Polaris House, North Star Avenue
Swindon, SN2 1EU
Tel: 01793 411727 or 411561
Mob: 07917 086369 or 557215
Carl Stiansen
Durham University Press Office
Tel: 0191 334 6077 / 0191 334 6075
1. The research paper 'Last Glacial Vegetation of Northern Eurasia' - Allen, Judy RM et al, is published in Quaternary Science Reviews. doi: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.05.031.
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