4.2 Article

Ecomorphology of the cervid calcaneus as a proxy for paleoenvironmental reconstruction

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ar.24845

Keywords

Cervidae; ecomorphology; locomotion; morphometrics; paleoecology

Funding

  1. Department of Anthropology (Durham University)

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This study found that the morphology of the cervid calcaneus varies primarily with locomotor strategy and habitat, making it a valuable proxy for inferring characteristics of ancient environments. Confounding factors such as sexual dimorphism, allometry, and phylogeny were accounted for, and did not substantially obscure predictions of habitat.
This study presents new ecomorphological models for the cervid calcaneus that can be used to make predictions about the nature of ancient environments. Using geometric morphometrics to quantitatively assess the length of the articular surface supporting the malleolus, the length and orientation of the tuber calcanei, and the position of the articular facets, we aimed to establish correlations between morphological traits, locomotor behavior, and environmental parameters in extant cervids. The morphology of the calcaneus was found to primarily vary with locomotor strategy and habitat, along a continuum from habitats with an open vegetation structure to habitats with a closed vegetation structure. Confounding factors, including sexual dimorphism, allometry, and phylogeny were accounted for using Principal Component Analysis, regressions and phylogenetic comparative methods. The results of our analyses suggested that these factors did not substantially obscure habitat predictions. As such, the calcaneus provides a valuable proxy for paleoenvironmental reconstruction that is broadly applicable to Quaternary fossil assemblages with a sufficiently large sample of cervids.

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