Millennial-scale faunal record reveals differential resilience of European large mammals to human impacts across the Holocene

Author:

Crees Jennifer J.1,Carbone Chris1,Sommer Robert S.2,Benecke Norbert3,Turvey Samuel T.1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Zoology, Zoological Society of London, Regent's Park, London NW1 4RY, UK

2. Department of Landscape Ecology, Institute for Natural Resource Conservation, University of Kiel, Olshausenstrasse 75, 24118 Kiel, Germany

3. Department of Natural Sciences, German Archaeological Institute, Im Dol 2-6, Berlin 14195, Germany

Abstract

The use of short-term indicators for understanding patterns and processes of biodiversity loss can mask longer-term faunal responses to human pressures. We use an extensive database of approximately 18 700 mammalian zooarchaeological records for the last 11 700 years across Europe to reconstruct spatio-temporal dynamics of Holocene range change for 15 large-bodied mammal species. European mammals experienced protracted, non-congruent range losses, with significant declines starting in some species approximately 3000 years ago and continuing to the present, and with the timing, duration and magnitude of declines varying individually between species. Some European mammals became globally extinct during the Holocene, whereas others experienced limited or no significant range change. These findings demonstrate the relatively early onset of prehistoric human impacts on postglacial biodiversity, and mirror species-specific patterns of mammalian extinction during the Late Pleistocene. Herbivores experienced significantly greater declines than carnivores, revealing an important historical extinction filter that informs our understanding of relative resilience and vulnerability to human pressures for different taxa. We highlight the importance of large-scale, long-term datasets for understanding complex protracted extinction processes, although the dynamic pattern of progressive faunal depletion of European mammal assemblages across the Holocene challenges easy identification of ‘static’ past baselines to inform current-day environmental management and restoration.

Funder

Royal Society

Natural Environment Research Council

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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