有几代人可以研究?现代景观中“尸骨”历史生态洞见的期待与应用

Joshua Miller, E. Wald, P. Druckenmiller, Carl Simpson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

躺在景观表面的骨骼遗骸对评估现存种群的历史状态很有用,但这些资源能在多长时间内为管理和保护提供信息?此外,环境设置的差异如何影响可用时间序列的广度?利用来自全球各地的放射性碳定年骨骼,我们评估了骨骼在景观上存在的最长时间与每个地方的年平均温度之间的关系。我们发现骨骼可以在寒冷(高纬度)环境中持续数千年,并且在当地温度和记录的最大骨骼持续时间之间存在很强的联系(R2 > 0.9, p < 0.01)。这种关系提供了一种初步的预期,即来自不同环境的骨骼遗骸可以提供历史生态背景的持续时间。在整个北极地区,驯鹿(Rangifer tarandus)是最丰富的大型哺乳动物,可以说是多种人类文化中最具经济意义的哺乳动物,包括作为关键的营养和文化资源。对于迁徙的驯鹿来说,在冬季栖息地和春季产仔地之间的迁徙是所有陆生物种中最长的年度迁徙,保持进入这些地区的通道是保护的首要任务。但是鹿群使用特定的产犊地有多久了?躺在冻土带上的脱落的雌鹿角可以让我们深入了解历史上的产犊地理,因为它们在分娩后几天内就会脱落。在对豪猪驯鹿群(PCH)沿海平原产犊地(阿拉斯加北极国家野生动物保护区)的鹿角进行调查后,我们用放射性碳测定了三只高度风化的雌性鹿角的年代。鹿角的年龄在1600年到3000年之间。这些鹿角为数千年前PCH产犊地的产犊活动提供了第一个物理证据,并证实了沿海平原作为驯鹿产犊地的长期生态遗产。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How Many Generations are Available for Study? Expectations and Applications of Historical Ecological Insight from Bones Lying on Modern Landscapes
Skeletal remains lying on landscape surfaces are useful for evaluating historical states of living populations, but across how much time can such resources inform management and conservation? Further, how do differences in environmental setting impact the breadth of the available timeseries? Using radiocarbon dated bones from across the globe, we evaluated the relationship between the maximum duration that bones persist on landscapes and the mean annual temperature of each locality. We found that bones can persist for several millennia in cold (high-latitude) settings and that there is a strong link (R2 > 0.9, p < 0.01) between local temperature and the logged duration of maximum bone persistence. This relationship provides an initial expectation for the duration across which skeletal remains from different settings can provide historical ecological context. Across the Holarctic, caribou (Rangifer tarandus) are the most abundant large mammal and arguably the most economically significant one for multiple human cultures, including serving as a key nutritional and cultural resource. For migratory caribou, movements between winter ranges and spring calving grounds are among the longest annual migrations of any terrestrial species and maintaining access to these areas is a top conservation priority. But how long have herds used particular calving grounds? Shed female antlers lying on the tundra provide insight into historical calving geography because they are shed within days of giving birth. Following antler surveys across the Coastal Plain calving grounds (Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, Alaska) of the Porcupine Caribou Herd (PCH), we radiocarbon dated three highly weathered female antlers. Antler ages ranged between ~1,600 and >3,000 calendar years ago. These antlers provide the first physical evidence of calving activity on the PCH calving grounds from previous millennia and substantiate the long ecological legacy of the Coastal Plain as a caribou calving ground.
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