4.7 Article

Body mass predicts isotope enrichment in herbivorous mammals

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2018.1020

Keywords

isotope fractionation; body mass; stable isotopes; mammals; digestive physiology; sloths

Funding

  1. Florida Museum of Natural History
  2. PCP-PIRE project [NSF PIRE 0966884]
  3. Columbia University GSAS
  4. American Museum of Natural History (Division of Paleontology Frick Fund)
  5. American Museum of Natural History (RGGS)

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Carbon isotopic signatures recorded in vertebrate tissues derive from ingested food and thus reflect ecologies and ecosystems. For almost two decades, most carbon isotope-based ecological interpretations of extant and extinct herbivorous mammals have used a single diet-bioapatite enrichment value (14 parts per thousand). Assuming this single value applies to all herbivorous mammals, from tiny monkeys to giant elephants, it overlooks potential effects of distinct physiological and metabolic processes on carbon fractionation. By analysing a never before assessed herbivorous group spanning a broad range of body masses-sloths-we discovered considerable variation in diet-bioapatite delta C-13 enrichment among mammals. Statistical tests (ordinary least squares, quantile, robust regressions, Akaike information criterion model tests) document independence from phylogeny, and a previously unrecognized strong and significant correlation of delta C-13 enrichment with body mass for all mammalian herbivores. A single-factor body mass model outperforms all other single-factor or more complex combinatorial models evaluated, including for physiological variables (metabolic rate and body temperature proxies), and indicates that body mass alone predicts delta C-13 enrichment. These analyses, spanning more than 5 orders of magnitude of body sizes, yield a size-dependent prediction of isotopic enrichment across Mammalia and for distinct digestive physiologies, permitting reconstruction of foregut versus hindgut fermentation for fossils and refined mean annual palaeoprecipitation estimates based on delta C-13 of mammalian bioapatite.

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