52,000 years of woolly rhinoceros population dynamics reveal extinction mechanisms

Author:

Fordham Damien A.123ORCID,Brown Stuart C.14ORCID,Canteri Elisabetta12ORCID,Austin Jeremy J.1,Lomolino Mark V.5ORCID,Haythorne Sean16,Armstrong Edward7ORCID,Bocherens Hervé89ORCID,Manica Andrea10ORCID,Rey-Iglesia Alba4ORCID,Rahbek Carsten231112ORCID,Nogués-Bravo David2,Lorenzen Eline D.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Environment Institute, School of Biological Sciences, University of Adelaide, Adelaide SA, 5005, Australia

2. Center for Macroecology, Evolution, and Climate, Globe Institute, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen Ø 2100, Denmark

3. Center for Global Mountain Biodiversity, Globe Institute, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen Ø 2100, Denmark

4. Globe Institute, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen K 1350, Denmark

5. Department of Environmental and Forest Biology, College of Environmental Science, Syracuse, NY 13210

6. Centre of Excellence for Biosecurity Risk Analysis, School of Biosciences, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC 3010, Australia

7. Department of Geosciences and Geography, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, FI-00014, Finland

8. Senckenberg Centre for Human Evolution and Palaeoenvironment, Tübingen 72074, Germany

9. Department of Geosciences, Biogeology, University of Tübingen, Tübingen 72074, Germany

10. Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, CB23EJ Cambridge, United Kingdom

11. Institute of Ecology, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China

12. Danish Institute for Advanced Study, University of Southern Denmark, Odense M 5230, Denmark

Abstract

The extinction of the woolly rhinoceros ( Coelodonta antiquitatis ) at the onset of the Holocene remains an enigma, with conflicting evidence regarding its cause and spatiotemporal dynamics. This partly reflects challenges in determining demographic responses of late Quaternary megafauna to climatic and anthropogenic causal drivers with available genetic and paleontological techniques. Here, we show that elucidating mechanisms of ancient extinctions can benefit from a detailed understanding of fine-scale metapopulation dynamics, operating over many millennia. Using an abundant fossil record, ancient DNA, and high-resolution simulation models, we untangle the ecological mechanisms and causal drivers that are likely to have been integral in the decline and later extinction of the woolly rhinoceros. Our 52,000-y reconstruction of distribution-wide metapopulation dynamics supports a pathway to extinction that began long before the Holocene, when the combination of cooling temperatures and low but sustained hunting by humans trapped woolly rhinoceroses in suboptimal habitats along the southern edge of their range. Modeling indicates that this ecological trap intensified after the end of the last ice age, preventing colonization of newly formed suitable habitats, weakening stabilizing metapopulation processes, triggering the extinction of the woolly rhinoceros in the early Holocene. Our findings suggest that fragmentation and resultant metapopulation dynamics should be explicitly considered in explanations of late Quaternary megafauna extinctions, sending a clarion call to the fragility of the remaining large-bodied grazers restricted to disjunct fragments of poor-quality habitat due to anthropogenic environmental change.

Funder

Department of Education and Training | Australian Research Council

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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