Title of article :
Paleoenvironments and paleoclimate of the Middle Miocene of central Spain: A reconstruction from dental wear of ruminants
Author/Authors :
DeMiguel، نويسنده , , Daniel and Azanza، نويسنده , , Beatriz and Morales، نويسنده , , Jorge، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Abstract :
A combined approach of dental microwear and mesowear was used to characterize the dietary adaptations of Middle Miocene ruminants from central Spain. Using their diets as environmental proxies allows us to reconstruct the environmental and climatic conditions that prevailed in this area during the epoch in which the dispersal of hominoids and pliopithecoids took place in Iberia (Late Aragonian; zones MN6–MN7/8).
ucted feeding of cervids and bovids suggests that, in general, species inhabited dry and seasonal landscapes. However, more browsing and less intermediate signatures are found in MN7/8 compared to MN6. Further, there were less grass-dominated mixed feeders in MN7/8. Dental data (higher densities of pits, lower densities of scratches and lower mesowear scores) strongly suggest the presence of a considerable humid episode and a change in the vegetation in the transition from MN6 to MN7/8, thus suggesting a higher similarity to the areas in which primates occurred than previously expected (Vallès–Penedès Basin). Some of the studied localities, such as Toril 3A, point to a mosaic of biomes that provided a range of opportunities for species that depended primarily on browsing.
ompetition and resource partitioning among ruminants found in Spain is reconstructed, results support the hypothesis that ecologically similar species maintained sympatry by exhibiting a generalistic (mixed) dietary behaviour, and one explanation could be that diets shifted seasonally. Thus, if significant seasonal habits were exhibited, species ate many of the same plant species, but often did so at different times of the year. Instead, if dietary specialization (browsing) was displayed, as occurred in the more humid and with denser tree cover environments such as Toril 3A, taxa may have exploited different plant species of browse material (fruits/seeds versus leaves).
Keywords :
paleoclimate , Paleoecology , Ruminantia , Paleoenvironments , middle miocene , Microwear/mesowear
Journal title :
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
Journal title :
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology