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Range and extinction dynamics of the steppe bison in Siberia:A pattern-oriented modelling approach

Authors :
July A. Pilowsky
Sean Haythorne
Stuart C. Brown
Mario Krapp
Edward Armstrong
Barry W. Brook
Carsten Rahbek
Damien A. Fordham
Department of Geosciences and Geography
Hominin Ecology
Source :
Pilowsky, J A, Haythorne, S, Brown, S C, Krapp, M, Armstrong, E, Brook, B W, Rahbek, C & Fordham, D A 2022, ' Range and extinction dynamics of the steppe bison in Siberia : A pattern-oriented modelling approach ', Global Ecology and Biogeography, vol. 31, no. 12, pp. 2483-2497 . https://doi.org/10.1111/geb.13601
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Aim To determine the ecological processes and drivers of range collapse, population decline and eventual extinction of the steppe bison in Eurasia. Location Siberia. Time period Pleistocene and Holocene. Major taxa studied Steppe bison (Bison priscus). Methods We configured 110,000 spatially explicit population models (SEPMs) of climate-human-steppe bison interactions in Siberia, which we ran at generational time steps from 50,000 years before present. We used pattern-oriented modelling (POM) and fossil-based inferences of distribution and demographic change of steppe bison to identify which SEPMs adequately simulated important interactions between ecological processes and biological threats. These "best models" were then used to disentangle the mechanisms that were integral in the population decline and later extinction of the steppe bison in its last stronghold in Eurasia. Results Our continuous reconstructions of the range and extinction dynamics of steppe bison were able to reconcile inferences of spatio-temporal occurrence and the timing and location of extinction in Siberia based on hundreds of radiocarbon-dated steppe bison fossils. We showed that simulating the ecological pathway to extinction for steppe bison in Siberia in the early Holocene required very specific ecological niche constraints, demographic processes and a constrained synergy of climate and human hunting dynamics during the Pleistocene-Holocene transition. Main conclusions Ecological processes and drivers that caused ancient population declines of species can be reconstructed at high spatio-temporal resolutions using SEPMs and POM. Using this approach, we found that climatic change and hunting by humans are likely to have interacted with key ecological processes to cause the extinction of the steppe bison in its last refuge in Eurasia.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pilowsky, J A, Haythorne, S, Brown, S C, Krapp, M, Armstrong, E, Brook, B W, Rahbek, C & Fordham, D A 2022, ' Range and extinction dynamics of the steppe bison in Siberia : A pattern-oriented modelling approach ', Global Ecology and Biogeography, vol. 31, no. 12, pp. 2483-2497 . https://doi.org/10.1111/geb.13601
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2298070268d2ab55ec623211a949b540
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/geb.13601