A. Tyler Karp, James M. Russell, Joel O. Abraham, Tercia Strydom, A. Carla Staver
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Fecal Biomarkers in Soils Record Landscape-Scale Wild Herbivore Abundance
In Earth history, our understanding of how large-bodied herbivores shape a variety of ecosystem processes is limited by the quality of paleoecological proxies for herbivore composition and abundance. Fecal stanols are lipids that can be produced by microbes within animal digestive systems and that could remedy this dearth of proxies. We used two multi-decadal herbivore exclosures in Kruger National Park, South Africa, to constrain whether and how biomarker signatures preserve signals of herbivore abundance. Soil samples and dung counts were collected along transects across crests, mid-slopes, and sodic sites inside and outside exclosures. Soils were analyzed for steroid (sterols and stanols) concentrations and distributions. We found that stanol concentrations were significantly greater in sodic soils outside exclosures, where herbivore dung densities were greatest. In contrast, sterol concentrations did not differ between treatments. Ratios of stanol isomers to sterols, which account for both compound degradation and source, increased strongly with herbivore dung counts. Finally, while herbivore species compositions influenced steroid distributions, total herbivore abundance was their strongest predictor. Further calibration is needed, but this work provides strong preliminary evidence that wild herbivore populations are quantitatively recorded by fecal biomarker distributions.
期刊介绍:
Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems (G3) publishes research papers on Earth and planetary processes with a focus on understanding the Earth as a system. Observational, experimental, and theoretical investigations of the solid Earth, hydrosphere, atmosphere, biosphere, and solar system at all spatial and temporal scales are welcome. Articles should be of broad interest, and interdisciplinary approaches are encouraged.
Areas of interest for this peer-reviewed journal include, but are not limited to:
The physics and chemistry of the Earth, including its structure, composition, physical properties, dynamics, and evolution
Principles and applications of geochemical proxies to studies of Earth history
The physical properties, composition, and temporal evolution of the Earth''s major reservoirs and the coupling between them
The dynamics of geochemical and biogeochemical cycles at all spatial and temporal scales
Physical and cosmochemical constraints on the composition, origin, and evolution of the Earth and other terrestrial planets
The chemistry and physics of solar system materials that are relevant to the formation, evolution, and current state of the Earth and the planets
Advances in modeling, observation, and experimentation that are of widespread interest in the geosciences.