4.2 Article

Season-of-death and age-at-death of the easternmost European cave bears: Cementum and dentine increment analysis provides new insight into the cave bear ecology

Journal

BOREAS
Volume 51, Issue 4, Pages 810-823

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/bor.12590

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Institute of Plant and Animal Ecology, Ural Branch of the Russian Academyof Sciences, Russia [122021000095-0]
  2. Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia [122031100282-2]

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This study used cementum and dentine increment analysis to investigate the remains of cave bears from European Russia, the Urals and the Caucasus. The results showed that the majority of the cave bear remains belonged to adult and old animals, and the damage to dental crowns may be related to age, conflict between males, and food abrasion. Furthermore, the increment analysis indicated that the cave bears visited the caves year-round. These findings raise new questions in the study of the ecology of cave bears.
Cementum and dentine increment analysis was used for the first time to study the remains of cave bears from European Russia, the Urals and the Caucasus. This study analysed 12 canines belonging to 12 different individuals (five males and seven females) from genetically different lineages of cave bears. The increment analysis showed that all studied cave bears belong to the categories adults and old animals (from 10 to 32.5 years). The enamel crowns of all 12 canines were broken and/or had wear facets. Seven canines studied were severely broken (more than one-third of a canine crown missing). Significant damage to dental crowns may indicate old age, conflict between males and/or high food abrasion. The absence of significant differences in the extent of canine breakage between the youngest and the oldest animals, as well as between the males and the females, may indicate a significant role of food abrasiveness in the process of the grinding of canines. Until now, the question of whether these animals visited caves year-round or stayed there mainly for overwintering remained open. The increment analysis showed different seasons of the bears' death. Six individuals died in the warm season and four individuals died in the cold season. In all of the studied caves (excluding Medvezhiya Cave) the animals died in the warm season as well as in the cold season. All of the studied females perished either during the cold season or at the very beginning of the warm season. On the contrary, almost all of the examined males perished in the warm season. Thus, the cave bears visited the caves year-round. This study raises new questions in the study of the ecology of cave bears from different parts of their range.

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