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201210Nov23:42

Saber-​toothed cats and bear dogs: How they made cohab­i­ta­tion work

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pub­lished 10 Novem­ber 2012 | mod­i­fied 04 Decem­ber 2012
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The fos­silised fangs of saber-​toothed cats hold clues to how these extinct mam­mals shared space and food with other large preda­tors 9 mil­lion years ago.

Led by the Uni­ver­sity of Michi­gan (U-​M) and the Museo Nacional de Cien­cias Nat­u­rales in Madrid, a team of pale­on­tol­o­gists has analysed the tooth enamel of two species of saber-​toothed cats and a bear dog unearthed in geo­log­i­cal pits near Madrid. Bear dogs, also extinct, had dog-​like teeth and a bear-​like body and gait. The find­ings of the study are pub­lished in the Pro­ceed­ings of the Royal Soci­ety B, 7th Novem­ber.

These three ani­mals were sym­patric — they inhab­ited the same geo­graphic area at the same time. What they did to coex­ist was to avoid each other and par­ti­tion the resources
Soledad Domingo, lead author, U-​M Museum of Pale­on­tol­ogy, post­doc­toral fel­low »


The researchers found that the cat species — a leopard-​sized Promegan­tereon ogy­gia and a much larger, lion-​sized Machairo­dus aphanis­tus — lived together in a wood­land area. They likely hunted the same prey — horses and wild boar. In this habi­tat, the small saber-​toothed cats could have used tree cover to avoid encoun­ter­ing the larger ones. The bear dog hunted ante­lope in a more open area that over­lapped the cats’ ter­ri­tory, but was slightly sep­a­rated.

Sabertooth cats beardogs SpainMil­lions of years before the first humans, the preda­tors lived dur­ing the late Miocene Period in a forested area that had patches of grass­land. Large car­ni­vores such as these are rare in the fos­sil record, pri­mar­ily because plant-​eating ani­mals lower on the food chain have out­num­bered meat-​eaters through­out his­tory. Cerro de los Batal­lones, where Domingo has been exca­vat­ing for the past eight years, is spe­cial. Of its nine sites, two are ancient pits with an abun­dance of meat-​eating mam­mal bones. Agile preda­tors, the researchers say, likely leapt into the nat­ural traps in search of trapped prey. “These sites offer a unique win­dow to under­stand life in the past,” Domingo said.

To arrive at their find­ings, the researchers con­ducted what’s called a sta­ble car­bon iso­tope analy­sis on the ani­mals’ teeth. Using a dentist’s drill with a dia­mond bit, they sam­pled teeth from 69 spec­i­mens, includ­ing 27 saber-​toothed cats and bear dogs. The rest were plant-​eaters. They iso­lated the car­bon from the tooth enamel. Using a mass spec­trom­e­ter, which you could think of as a type of scale, they mea­sured the ratio of the more mas­sive car­bon 13 mol­e­cules to the less-​massive car­bon 12. An iso­tope is a ver­sion of an ele­ment that con­tains a dif­fer­ent num­ber of neu­trons in its nucleus.

Car­bon 12 and 13 are both present in the car­bon diox­ide that plants take in dur­ing pho­to­syn­the­sis. Dif­fer­ent plants make use of the iso­topes in dif­fer­ent ways, and so they retain dif­fer­ent amounts of them in their fibres. When an her­bi­vore eats a plant, that plant leaves an iso­topic sig­na­ture in the animal’s bones and teeth. The sig­na­ture trav­els through the food chain and can be found in car­ni­vores as well.

“This would be the same in your tooth enamel today,” Domingo said. “If we sam­pled them, we could have an idea of what you eat. It’s a sig­na­ture that remains through time.”

Because the researchers can tell what the her­bi­vores ate, they can sur­mise what their habi­tat was like. They believe the ani­mals in this study lived in a wooded area that con­tained patches of grass­land. The cats showed no sig­nif­i­cant dif­fer­ence in their sta­ble car­bon iso­tope ratios. That means they likely fed on the same prey and lived in the same habi­tat, but the paper posits that the species each fed on different-​sized prey. The find­ings demon­strate the time­less­ness of predator-​prey rela­tion­ships.

The three largest mam­malian preda­tors cap­tured prey in dif­fer­ent por­tions of the habi­tat, as do coex­ist­ing large preda­tors today. So even though none of the species in this 9-​million year old ecosys­tem are still alive today (some of their descen­dants are), we found evi­dence for sim­i­lar eco­log­i­cal inter­ac­tions as in mod­ern ecosystems
(Cather­ine Bad­g­ley, co-​author, assis­tant pro­fes­sor of ecol­ogy and evo­lu­tion­ary biol­ogy)



The above news item is reprinted from mate­ri­als avail­able at Uni­veristy of Michi­gan. Orig­i­nal text may be edited for con­tent and length.
(Source: Uni­ver­sity of Michi­gan News Release, 06.11.2012)
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