AI Article Synopsis

  • Megafaunal extinctions lead to significant ecological changes, as they disrupt ecosystems and trigger secondary extinctions due to the loss of key species that help manage vegetation and nutrient cycles.
  • Many plants evolved traits that rely on these large animals for reproduction and seed dispersal, which can also be seen as preadaptive features for agriculture, like fleshy fruits attracting non-human dispersers.
  • The extinction of megafauna impacts seed dispersal, population dynamics, and habitat integrity, while humans have adapted to fill some of these ecological roles, spurring rapid changes in domestication processes.

Article Abstract

Megafaunal extinctions are recurring events that cause evolutionary ripples, as cascades of secondary extinctions and shifting selective pressures reshape ecosystems. Megafaunal browsers and grazers are major ecosystem engineers, they: keep woody vegetation suppressed; are nitrogen cyclers; and serve as seed dispersers. Most angiosperms possess sets of physiological traits that allow for the fixation of mutualisms with megafauna; some of these traits appear to serve as exaptation (preadaptation) features for farming. As an easily recognized example, fleshy fruits are, an exaptation to agriculture, as they evolved to recruit a non-human disperser. We hypothesize that the traits of rapid annual growth, self-compatibility, heavy investment in reproduction, high plasticity (wide reaction norms), and rapid evolvability were part of an adaptive syndrome for megafaunal seed dispersal. We review the evolutionary importance that megafauna had for crop and weed progenitors and discuss possible ramifications of their extinction on: (1) seed dispersal; (2) population dynamics; and (3) habitat loss. Humans replaced some of the ecological services that had been lost as a result of late Quaternary extinctions and drove rapid evolutionary change resulting in domestication.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8024633PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2021.649394DOI Listing

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