The utility of alpine cave fossil assemblages for zoological census: an example from northern Utah, United States

IF 1.5 3区 生物学 Q2 ZOOLOGY
Kaedan O’Brien, Randall B Irmis, Joan Brenner Coltrain, Daniel Martin Dalmas, Katrina M Derieg, Thomas Evans, Eric S Richards, Fumiko M Richards, Eric A Rickart, J Tyler Faith
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Abstract

Assemblages of mammal skeletal remains provide a powerful tool for censusing wildlife populations to establish zoological baselines required for evaluating biogeographic trends over varying timescales. Caves provide an ideal depositional setting to preserve these skeletal remains despite potential time averaging and taphonomic filtering. We describe a Holocene paleontological assemblage from Boomerang Cave in the Bear River Range of Cache County, northern Utah, United States, at an elevation of 2,231 m, and at the boundary between the Great Basin and Rocky Mountain biogeographic provinces. We analyzed 1,228 surface-collected specimens from six areas within the cave, and identified a minimum of 22 nonoverlapping mammalian taxa, comprising all size classes present in the region. Compared to museum records for mammals from the Bear River Range and individuals trapped or observed in the vicinity of the cave, specimen-based rarefaction demonstrates that our assemblage captures most of the mammalian diversity expected in the area. This is particularly apparent for carnivorans and soricids, which are particularly well-represented in the Boomerang Cave assemblage, with the former clade represented by at least nine taxa. This high level of diversity can be attributed to the relatively random nature of natural trap cave deposition, reducing accumulation biases due to size or diet. We also record the first occurrence of Merriam’s Shrew (Sorex merriami) from the Bear River Range. Our analysis does not indicate any mammalian changes between late Holocene and present-day communities, but these data establish a new zoological baseline for an alpine community at the interface between two key biogeographic provinces in western North America. Our work highlights the value of collecting skeletal remains from cave assemblages as a convenient and fast method for censusing terrestrial mammalian communities.
高山洞穴化石组合在动物普查中的应用:以美国犹他州北部为例
哺乳动物骨骼遗骸的组合为野生动物种群普查提供了强有力的工具,为评估不同时间尺度的生物地理趋势提供了必要的动物学基线。洞穴提供了一个理想的沉积环境来保存这些骨骼遗骸,尽管潜在的时间平均和埋藏过滤。研究人员描述了美国犹他州北部卡什县熊河山脉Boomerang洞穴的全新世古生物组合,海拔2231米,位于大盆地和落基山生物地理省之间。我们分析了从洞穴内6个区域收集的1228个表面标本,确定了至少22个不重叠的哺乳动物分类群,包括该地区存在的所有大小类别。与熊河山脉的哺乳动物博物馆记录和洞穴附近捕获或观察到的个体相比,基于标本的稀少表明,我们的组合捕获了该地区预期的大部分哺乳动物多样性。这一点在食肉动物和固体类动物中尤为明显,它们在回旋洞组合中得到了很好的代表,前者至少有9个分类群。这种高水平的多样性可归因于天然圈闭洞穴沉积的相对随机性,减少了由于大小或饮食造成的积累偏差。我们还记录了首次出现在熊河山脉的梅里亚姆鼩鼱(Sorex merriami)。我们的分析没有表明在全新世晚期和现代群落之间有任何哺乳动物的变化,但这些数据为北美西部两个主要生物地理省交界的高山群落建立了新的动物学基线。我们的工作强调了从洞穴组合中收集骨骼遗骸作为一种方便快速的陆地哺乳动物群落普查方法的价值。
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来源期刊
Journal of Mammalogy
Journal of Mammalogy 生物-动物学
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
5.90%
发文量
106
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Papers are published on mammalian behavior, conservation, ecology, genetics, morphology, physiology, and taxonomy.
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