» Articles » PMID: 39144492

Was the Steppe Bison a Grazing Beast in Pleistocene Landscapes?

Overview
Journal R Soc Open Sci
Specialty Science
Date 2024 Aug 15
PMID 39144492
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The history and palaeoecology of the steppe bison () remain incompletely understood despite its widespread distribution. Using dental microwear textural analysis (DMTA) and vegetation modelling, we reconstructed the diet and assessed the habitat of steppe bison inhabiting Eurasia and Alaska since the Middle Pleistocene. During the Late Pleistocene, steppe bison occupied a variety of biome types: from the mosaic of temperate summergreen forest and steppe/temperate grassland (Serbia) to the tundra biomes (Siberia and Alaska). Despite the differences in the identified biome types, the diet of steppe bison did not differ significantly among populations in Eurasia. DMTA classified it as a mixed forager in all populations studied. The DMTA of Bb1 bison-a recently identified genetically extinct sister-clade of -was typical of a highly grazing bovid species and differed from all populations. The results of the study temper the common perception that steppe bison were grazers in steppe habitats. The dietary plasticity of the steppe bison was lower when compared with modern European bison and may have played an important role in its extinction, even in the stable tundra biome of eastern Siberia, where it has survived the longest in all of Eurasia.

Citing Articles

Was the steppe bison a grazing beast in Pleistocene landscapes?.

Hofman-Kaminska E, Merceron G, Bocherens H, Boeskorov G, Krotova O, Protopopov A R Soc Open Sci. 2024; 11(8):240317.

PMID: 39144492 PMC: 11321853. DOI: 10.1098/rsos.240317.

References
1.
Kirillova I, Zanina O, Kosintsev P, Kulkova M, Lapteva E, Trofimova S . The first finding of a frozen Holocene bison (Bison priscus Bojanus, 1827) carcass in Chukotka. Dokl Biol Sci. 2013; 452:296-9. DOI: 10.1134/S0012496613050128. View

2.
Willerslev E, Davison J, Moora M, Zobel M, Coissac E, Edwards M . Fifty thousand years of Arctic vegetation and megafaunal diet. Nature. 2014; 506(7486):47-51. DOI: 10.1038/nature12921. View

3.
Boeskorov G, Potapova O, Mashchenko E, Protopopov A, Kuznetsova T, Agenbroad L . Preliminary analyses of the frozen mummies of mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), bison (Bison priscus) and horse (Equus sp.) from the Yana-Indigirka Lowland, Yakutia, Russia. Integr Zool. 2013; 9(4):471-80. DOI: 10.1111/1749-4877.12079. View

4.
Merceron G, Ramdarshan A, Blondel C, Boisserie J, Brunetiere N, Francisco A . Untangling the environmental from the dietary: dust does not matter. Proc Biol Sci. 2016; 283(1838). PMC: 5031653. DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2016.1032. View

5.
Winkler D, Schulz-Kornas E, Kaiser T, Cuyper A, Clauss M, Tutken T . Forage silica and water content control dental surface texture in guinea pigs and provide implications for dietary reconstruction. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2019; 116(4):1325-1330. PMC: 6347716. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1814081116. View