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Dental ecometrics of tropical Africa : Linking vegetation types and communities of large plant-eating mammals

Zliobaite, Indre ; Tang, Hui ; Saarinen, Juha ; Fortelius, Mikael ; Rinne, Janne LU and Rannikko, Janina (2018) In Evolutionary Ecology Research 19(2). p.127-147
Abstract

Background: The dental characteristics of large plant-eating mammals, such as hypsodonty, quite accurately describe present and past climatic conditions worldwide. However, several peculiar regions give systematically higher predictions of primary productivity than the local average environmental conditions should support. We call these 'anomalies'. Anomalies are prominent in areas dominated by pastoralism, such as the Sahel in Africa, suggesting human-competitive pressure against the wild animal communities. Question: What might explain such dental ecometric anomalies? Data: Occurrence of large, plant-eating mammals worldwide; quantitative characteristics of their teeth; global net primary productivity derived from temperature and... (More)

Background: The dental characteristics of large plant-eating mammals, such as hypsodonty, quite accurately describe present and past climatic conditions worldwide. However, several peculiar regions give systematically higher predictions of primary productivity than the local average environmental conditions should support. We call these 'anomalies'. Anomalies are prominent in areas dominated by pastoralism, such as the Sahel in Africa, suggesting human-competitive pressure against the wild animal communities. Question: What might explain such dental ecometric anomalies? Data: Occurrence of large, plant-eating mammals worldwide; quantitative characteristics of their teeth; global net primary productivity derived from temperature and precipitation relationships. Analyses: We analyse dental ecometrics of present-day Africa, with the aim to understand the ecology behind such anomalies. By identifying dental traits that are differentially sensitive to human activities, we can develop tailored models for accurate reconstruction of tropical habitats while taking human activities into account. Results: A combination of dental crown height and reinforcement of cusps helps to distinguish continuous, moist forests from patchy forest fragments within arid grasslands. We demonstrate how dental traits that have different sensitivity to competition with livestock can capture anthropogenic effects on wild animal communities in climatically sensitive zones. We produce a methodology for understanding the present and guiding the future of terrestrial ecosystems.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Ecometrics, Grasslands, Mammalian teeth, Pastoralism, Sahel, Vegetation types
in
Evolutionary Ecology Research
volume
19
issue
2
pages
21 pages
publisher
Evolutionary Ecology Ltd
external identifiers
  • scopus:85048801768
ISSN
1522-0613
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
87097aa3-f78d-4bb3-b490-4051207c3196
alternative location
http://www.evolutionary-ecology.com/issues/v19/n02/ddar3135.pdf
date added to LUP
2018-07-06 11:27:12
date last changed
2022-03-09 19:34:51
@article{87097aa3-f78d-4bb3-b490-4051207c3196,
  abstract     = {{<p>Background: The dental characteristics of large plant-eating mammals, such as hypsodonty, quite accurately describe present and past climatic conditions worldwide. However, several peculiar regions give systematically higher predictions of primary productivity than the local average environmental conditions should support. We call these 'anomalies'. Anomalies are prominent in areas dominated by pastoralism, such as the Sahel in Africa, suggesting human-competitive pressure against the wild animal communities. Question: What might explain such dental ecometric anomalies? Data: Occurrence of large, plant-eating mammals worldwide; quantitative characteristics of their teeth; global net primary productivity derived from temperature and precipitation relationships. Analyses: We analyse dental ecometrics of present-day Africa, with the aim to understand the ecology behind such anomalies. By identifying dental traits that are differentially sensitive to human activities, we can develop tailored models for accurate reconstruction of tropical habitats while taking human activities into account. Results: A combination of dental crown height and reinforcement of cusps helps to distinguish continuous, moist forests from patchy forest fragments within arid grasslands. We demonstrate how dental traits that have different sensitivity to competition with livestock can capture anthropogenic effects on wild animal communities in climatically sensitive zones. We produce a methodology for understanding the present and guiding the future of terrestrial ecosystems.</p>}},
  author       = {{Zliobaite, Indre and Tang, Hui and Saarinen, Juha and Fortelius, Mikael and Rinne, Janne and Rannikko, Janina}},
  issn         = {{1522-0613}},
  keywords     = {{Ecometrics; Grasslands; Mammalian teeth; Pastoralism; Sahel; Vegetation types}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{03}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{127--147}},
  publisher    = {{Evolutionary Ecology Ltd}},
  series       = {{Evolutionary Ecology Research}},
  title        = {{Dental ecometrics of tropical Africa : Linking vegetation types and communities of large plant-eating mammals}},
  url          = {{http://www.evolutionary-ecology.com/issues/v19/n02/ddar3135.pdf}},
  volume       = {{19}},
  year         = {{2018}},
}