Kuwait Times

Humans, not climate, killed off Australia’s big beasts

Over 85% of Australia wildlife extinct after humans

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Humans exterminat­ed an array of weird and wonderful Australian creatures within only 4,000 years of arriving on the continent, according to a study published yesterday that shifted blame away from climate change. Before the arrival of homo sapiens, Australia boasted 450-kilogram, wombats weighing as much as a rhino, eight-meter lizards, larger-than-human birds, and car-sized tortoises.

More than 85 percent of Australia’s big mammals, birds and reptiles went extinct “shortly” after our species appeared, a team of scientists reported in the journal Nature Communicat­ions. The cause of the megafauna die-off Down Under some 45,000 years ago has been the subject of much scientific debate. A study in Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences in 2013 said Australia’s giant animals were already mostly extinct by the time humans arrived-and pointed the finger at climate change.

That study, based on fossil finds, said there was no evidence that a human ever killed a single mega-animal-many of which were herbivores. The new research, on the contrary, concluded the mass extinction was much more likely caused by “overkill”, specifical­ly the hunting of juvenile animals. The team based its findings on the remains of ancient megafauna excrement found in a sediment core drilled in the Indian Ocean, off the southwest Australian coast.

Look back in time

The core contains chronologi­cal layers of material that was blown or swept from the land into the sea, including dust, ash and spores from a fungus that thrived in the dung of plant-eating creatures, the University of Colorado at Boulder, which took part in the study, said in a statement. This allowed the team to “look back in time” and reconstruc­t climate and ecosystem conditions up to 150,000 years ago. The abundance of fungus spores in the core “is good evidence for a lot of large mammals on the southweste­rn Australian landscape up until about 45,000 years ago,” CU Boulder scientist Gifford Miller explained. “Then, in a window of time lasting just a few thousand years, the megafauna population collapsed”-and that within 4,000 years of human occupation of the continent.

The environmen­t in southwest Australia changed from a dense eucalyptus woodland to arid, open shrubland about 70,000 years ago-some 23,000 years before evidence for the presence of humans on the continent. The team found no associatio­n between environmen­tal change and megafauna extinction, or evidence that the animals suffering a slow demise as the area became drier.

“These findings rule out climate change, and implicate humans as the primary extinction cause,” the researcher­s concluded.

 ??  ?? JORHAT: This file photo taken on October 9, 2014 shows a capped gibbon sitting in a tree at the Gibbon Wildlife Sanctuary in Jorhat district in the eastern state of Assam. — AFP
JORHAT: This file photo taken on October 9, 2014 shows a capped gibbon sitting in a tree at the Gibbon Wildlife Sanctuary in Jorhat district in the eastern state of Assam. — AFP

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