4.7 Article

Giant beaver palaeoecology inferred from stable isotopes

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-43710-9

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Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. Faculty of Science (The University of Western Ontario)
  3. Alexander Graham Bell Canada Graduate Scholarship-Master's
  4. Northern Training Grant from the Northern Scientific Training Program
  5. Arcangelo Rea Family Foundation
  6. Canada Foundation for Innovation
  7. Ontario Research Fund
  8. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Tools and Infrastructure grants
  9. Canada Research Chairs Program

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This is a multi-individual (n =11), stable carbon and nitrogen isotope study of bone collagen (delta C-13(col) and delta N-15(col)) from the giant beaver (genus Castoroides). The now-extinct giant beaver was once one of the most widespread Pleistocene megafauna in North America. We confirm that Castoroides consumed a diet of predominantly submerged aquatic macrophytes. These dietary preferences rendered the giant beaver highly dependent on wetland habitat for survival. Castoroides' delta C-13(c)ol and delta C-15(col) do not support the hypothesis that the giant beaver consumed trees or woody plants, which suggests that it did not share the same behaviours as Castor (i.e., tree-cutting and harvesting). The onset of warmer, more arid conditions likely contributed to the extinction of Castoroides. Six new radiocarbon dates help establish the chronology of the northward dispersal of the giant beaver in Beringia, indicating a correlation with ice sheet retreat.

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