The seasons, as we know them, did not always exist. This is the result of a new paleo-environmental study that analysed fossil teeth to reveal the eating habits of a diverse group of herbivores that lived during the Pleistocene, the period that was characterised by an increase in climactic seasonality following a long glaciation that took place 900,000 years ago.
Credit: Flavia Strani |
The researchers analysed the fossil teeth of various ungulate herbivores (i.e., cervids, bovids and equids) to reconstruct their eating habits in great detail, identify their habitats and understand the environmental transformations that took place during the Pleistocene. The fossils, which were unearthed from various levels at the site of Vallparadís Estació (Terrassa, in Catalonia), date back to a chronological interval ranging from 1 million to 600,000 years ago.
Dental wear patterns of fossil ungulates [Credit: Strani, F. et al. 2019] |
In this scenario, the herbivore ungulates adapted by varying their eating habits to survive in hard times, even consuming plants that were not optimal for their usual diet.
The research also sheds light on the drastic increase in seasonality, a possible effect of the long glaciation that may have had a significant influence on the ecosystems of the Mediterranean Region, that periodically changed the quality of the plant resources available in the Region of Catalonia.
“These results,” explains Raffaele Sardella, Italian Coordinator of the study, “confirm the importance of studying the fossil record to understand the current and future climate variations that could influence the habitats and fauna present today in the Mediterranean.”
Source: Sapienza Università di Roma [April 19, 2019]
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