期刊
PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY
卷 632, 期 -, 页码 -出版社
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.palaeo.2023.111843
关键词
Body mass; Community composition analysis; Predator competition; Reptiles; La Venta; Niche replacement
The La Venta fauna in Colombia is a highly diverse location in the neotropics, with a large number of mammal and reptile species. It has been found that there was minimal competition among carnivorous taxa in the carnivore guild, and crocodyliforms played a dominant role in the macro-predatory niches.
The La Venta fauna of Colombia (similar to 13.5-11.5 Ma) represents the most diverse Tertiary locality in the neotropics, with 75 mammal species and a highly non-analogue reptile assemblage containing at least seven testudines and six crocodyliforms. It has been widely hypothesized that the carnivore guilds of South American mammals throughout the Cenozoic were depauperate, potentially due to the continent's isolated history, and that, as a result, non-mammals acted as its dominant predators. Here we test this hypothesis using novel community composition analysis and a model of prey meat availability and competition between carnivorous taxa for prey in different size classes. We find that the carnivorous reptiles account for a very large proportion of demanded biomass, but that, even including reptiles, there was minimal competition for resources among the carnivore guild, relative to competition within modern communities. Further, we evaluate one possible impact of low predation pressure on the herbivores of La Venta through a population analysis of enamel hypoplasia in the notoungulate Pericotoxodon platignathus. At La Venta, mammalian carnivores alone exerted very little predation pressure on the terrestrial community, and our community composition analysis supports the filling of macro-predatory niches by crocodyliforms, including both the terrestrial sebecid Langstonia huilensis and semi-aquatic giant crocodylians.
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