AI Article Synopsis

  • Scientists discovered a lot of old animal fossils in Porcupine Cave, Colorado, which help us understand how animals reacted to climate changes long ago.
  • They found 127 different animal species from the mid-Pleistocene period, including 30 that were seen for the first time.
  • The research showed that smaller animals were more affected by warming climates, but the overall balance of animal communities stayed stable for a really long time, even before humans came along.

Article Abstract

Mid-Pleistocene vertebrates in North America are scarce but important for recognizing the ecological effects of climatic change in the absence of humans. We report on a uniquely rich mid-Pleistocene vertebrate sequence from Porcupine Cave, Colorado, which records at least 127 species and the earliest appearances of 30 mammals and birds. By analyzing >20,000 mammal fossils in relation to modern species and independent climatic proxies, we determined how mammal communities reacted to presumed glacial-interglacial transitions between 1,000,000 and 600,000 years ago. We conclude that climatic warming primarily affected mammals of lower trophic and size categories, in contrast to documented human impacts on higher trophic and size categories historically. Despite changes in species composition and minor changes in small-mammal species richness evident at times of climatic change, overall structural stability of mammal communities persisted >600,000 years before human impacts.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC438971PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0402592101DOI Listing

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