Did interaction between human pressure and Little Ice Age drive biological turnover in New Zealand?
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Waters, Jonathan
Fraser, Ceridwen
Maxwell, Justin J.
Rawlence, Nicolas J.
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Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract
Aim To test for simultaneous Holocene biogeographic turnover events in the
New Zealand region. Specifically, we synthesize ancient DNA, radiocarbon data
and archaeological data to assess the chronologies of late Holocene lineage
extinction and replacement.
Location Cool-temperate coastal ecosystems of New Zealand and the subantarctic.
Methods We present new ancient DNA and radiocarbon data for New Zealand
sea lions, and synthesize existing climatic, genetic and archaeological data,
to test for synchronous megafaunal extinction and replacement events. The collated
data include ancient DNA sequences from over 200 ancient sea lion and
penguin specimens, in addition to 150 modern genetic samples.
Results Our temporal genetic analyses show that, following human-driven
extinction events, synchronous marine megafaunal replacement events occurred
at around 1500 AD, coinciding with the Little Ice Age onset and an associated
drastic human demographic decline in southern New Zealand.
Conclusions A combination of climatic and human demographic shifts likely
facilitated northward expansion of subantarctic sea lion and penguin lineages,
replacing extirpated mainland New Zealand marine megafauna. Broadly, the
interaction between human pressure and late Holocene climatic change may
explain multiple biological turnover events in the Southern Hemisphere.
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Journal of Biogeography
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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