The Independent

Giant mammal extinction­s caused by climate change

Thought to have been annihilate­d by our early ancestors, megafauna experience­d habitat loss, research now suggests

- HARRY COCKBURN

Climate change was a major factor in the extinction of giant animals across Africa over the last several million years, according to new research which disputes the long-held belief that our earliest weaponwiel­ding ancestors were a significan­t factor. When and why megafauna, including colossal elephants and antlered giraffes, died out has remained a mystery for archaeolog­ists and paleontolo­gists.

Africa’s rich biodiversi­ty of the distant past was widely thought to have been impacted by the arrival of early human ancestors who hunted them to extinction. But the new work questions the validity of this theory, arguing there have been few attempts to test this scenario or explore alternativ­e ideas.

Scientists at the University of Utah argued long-term environmen­tal change drove the extinction­s, mainly in the form of deforestat­ion and grassland expansion caused by falling atmospheri­c carbon dioxide (CO2) levels. The work indicates species of the largest herbivores began a steady long-term decline about 4.6 million years ago, long before tool-using human ancestors became a threat to the animals.

Our early ancestors diverged from chimpanzee­s 4 million to 7.5 million years ago, but tools, use of animal carcases and hunting came much later. The very earliest stone tools may have been used 2.4 million years ago, but significan­t levels of hunting only began 50,000 years ago, the fossil record shows.

Tyler Faith, curator of archaeolog­y at the Natural History Museum of Utah and assistant professor in the Department of Anthropolo­gy at the University of Utah, led the study. He said: “Our analyses show that there is a steady, long-term decline of megaherbiv­ore diversity beginning around 4.6 million years ago. This extinction process kicks in over a million years before the very earliest evidence for human ancestors making tools or butchering animal carcasses and well before the appearance of any hominin species realistica­lly capable of hunting them, like Homo erectus.”

In Africa, our evolving predecesso­rs would have borne witness to many huge species which no longer walk the earth, including Deinotheri­um – a mighty elephant with backwards-curving tusks which weighed twice as much as an African bush elephant. There were also two large baboon species, the largest of which was about the same size of a modern gorilla.

One of the strangest animals was the Sivatheriu­m – a relative of the modern giraffe, and perhaps the largest ruminant ever to walk the earth. The species resembled a powerfully-built giraffe – over 3m tall, and weighing more than a tonne – but with a head like a stag with two pairs of antlers. In order to understand the demise of these and other megaherbiv­ores, Professor Faith and his team examined data from over 100 fossil records spanning the last seven million years. They also looked at

climate and environmen­t records and their effects, specifical­ly global atmospheri­c CO2 trends, stable carbon isotope records of vegetation structure, and stable carbon isotopes of eastern African fossil herbivore teeth.

Their analysis reveals that over the last seven million years substantia­l megaherbiv­ore extinction­s occurred: 28 lineages became extinct, leading to the present-day communitie­s lacking in large animals.

“The key factor in the Plio-Pleistocen­e megaherbiv­ore decline seems to be the expansion of grasslands, which is likely related to a global drop in atmospheri­c CO2 over the last five million years,” said co-author John Rowan, a postdoctor­al scientist from University of Massachuse­tts Amherst. Low CO2 levels favour tropical grasses over trees, and as a consequenc­e savannas became less woody and more open through time. We know that many of the extinct megaherbiv­ores fed on woody vegetation, so they seem to disappear alongside their food source.”

The loss of these massive herbivores may also account for other extinction­s which have been attributed to ancient hominins. Previous studies have suggested competitio­n with increasing­ly carnivorou­s species of early human ancestors led to the demise of numerous carnivores over the last few million years. But the new study suggest an alternativ­e.

“We know there are also major extinction­s among African carnivores at this time and that some of them, like sabretooth cats, may have specialise­d on very large prey, perhaps juvenile elephants,” said co-author Paul Koch, of the University of California. “It could be that some of these carnivores disappeare­d with their megaherbiv­ore prey.”

Professor Faith said: “Looking at all of the potential drivers of the megaherbiv­ore decline, our analyses suggest that changing climate and environmen­t played the key role in Africa’s past extinction­s.”

The study is published in the journal Science.

 ??  ?? Deinotheri­um became extinct about one million years ago (Wikimedia Commons)
Deinotheri­um became extinct about one million years ago (Wikimedia Commons)
 ??  ?? Sivatheriu­m – a relative of the giraffe – had a powerful neck and two sets of antlers (Wikimedia Commons)
Sivatheriu­m – a relative of the giraffe – had a powerful neck and two sets of antlers (Wikimedia Commons)

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