5
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
1 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: found
      • Article: found
      Is Open Access

      Climate‐driven ecological stability as a globally shared cause of Late Quaternary megafaunal extinctions: the Plaids and Stripes Hypothesis

      research-article

      Read this article at

      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          ABSTRACT

          Controversy persists about why so many large‐bodied mammal species went extinct around the end of the last ice age. Resolving this is important for understanding extinction processes in general, for assessing the ecological roles of humans, and for conserving remaining megafaunal species, many of which are endangered today. Here we explore an integrative hypothesis that asserts that an underlying cause of Late Quaternary megafaunal extinctions was a fundamental shift in the spatio‐temporal fabric of ecosystems worldwide. This shift was triggered by the loss of the millennial‐scale climate fluctuations that were characteristic of the ice age but ceased approximately 11700 years ago on most continents. Under ice‐age conditions, which prevailed for much of the preceding 2.6 Ma, these radical and rapid climate changes prevented many ecosystems from fully equilibrating with their contemporary climates. Instead of today's ‘striped’ world in which species' ranges have equilibrated with gradients of temperature, moisture, and seasonality, the ice‐age world was a disequilibrial ‘plaid’ in which species' ranges shifted rapidly and repeatedly over time and space, rarely catching up with contemporary climate. In the transient ecosystems that resulted, certain physiological, anatomical, and ecological attributes shared by megafaunal species pre‐adapted them for success. These traits included greater metabolic and locomotory efficiency, increased resistance to starvation, longer life spans, greater sensory ranges, and the ability to be nomadic or migratory. When the plaid world of the ice age ended, many of the advantages of being large were either lost or became disadvantages. For instance in a striped world, the low population densities and slow reproductive rates associated with large body size reduced the resiliency of megafaunal species to population bottlenecks. As the ice age ended, the downsides of being large in striped environments lowered the extinction thresholds of megafauna worldwide, which then increased the vulnerability of individual species to a variety of proximate threats they had previously tolerated, such as human predation, competition with other species, and habitat loss. For many megafaunal species, the plaid‐to‐stripes transition may have been near the base of a hierarchy of extinction causes whose relative importances varied geographically, temporally, and taxonomically.

          Related collections

          Most cited references208

          • Record: found
          • Abstract: not found
          • Article: not found

          A Practical Guide to Wavelet Analysis

            Bookmark
            • Record: found
            • Abstract: found
            • Article: not found

            Synergies among extinction drivers under global change.

            If habitat destruction or overexploitation of populations is severe, species loss can occur directly and abruptly. Yet the final descent to extinction is often driven by synergistic processes (amplifying feedbacks) that can be disconnected from the original cause of decline. We review recent observational, experimental and meta-analytic work which together show that owing to interacting and self-reinforcing processes, estimates of extinction risk for most species are more severe than previously recognised. As such, conservation actions which only target single-threat drivers risk being inadequate because of the cascading effects caused by unmanaged synergies. Future work should focus on how climate change will interact with and accelerate ongoing threats to biodiversity, such as habitat degradation, overexploitation and invasive species.
              Bookmark
              • Record: found
              • Abstract: not found
              • Article: not found

              Directions in Conservation Biology

                Bookmark

                Author and article information

                Contributors
                dhmann@alaska.edu
                Journal
                Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc
                Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc
                10.1111/(ISSN)1469-185X
                BRV
                Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society
                Blackwell Publishing Ltd (Oxford, UK )
                1464-7931
                1469-185X
                22 August 2018
                February 2019
                : 94
                : 1 ( doiID: 10.1111/brv.2019.94.issue-1 )
                : 328-352
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] Department of Geosciences and Institute of Arctic Biology University of Alaska Fairbanks AK 99775 USA
                [ 2 ] Institute of Arctic Biology University of Alaska Fairbanks AK 99775 USA
                [ 3 ] Lamont‐Doherty Earth Observatory Columbia University Palisades NY USA
                [ 4 ] Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of California Santa Cruz CA 95064 USA
                Author notes
                [*] [* ]Address for correspondence (Tel: (907)474‐6929; E‐mail: dhmann@ 123456alaska.edu ).
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1466-5495
                Article
                BRV12456
                10.1111/brv.12456
                7379602
                30136433
                e5f3dd8d-a312-44ea-9bc4-d280a0a2d4eb
                © 2018 The Authors. Biological Reviews published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Cambridge Philosophical Society.

                This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.

                History
                : 11 August 2017
                : 14 July 2018
                : 19 July 2018
                Page count
                Figures: 15, Tables: 0, Pages: 25, Words: 21410
                Funding
                Funded by: Bureau of Land Management , open-funder-registry 10.13039/100007149;
                Funded by: National Science Foundation , open-funder-registry 10.13039/100000001;
                Award ID: PLR 1417611/1417036
                Categories
                Original Article
                Original Articles
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                February 2019
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_JATSPMC version:5.8.5 mode:remove_FC converted:24.07.2020

                Ecology
                extinction,late quaternary,megafauna,climate change,terrestrial mammals,ecological disequilibrium,allometry

                Comments

                Comment on this article