Slow life history and physiological plasticity : survival strategies of a large mammal in a resource-poor environment

dc.contributor.author
Köhler, Meike
dc.contributor.author
Moyà Solà, Salvador
dc.date.issued
2009
dc.identifier
https://ddd.uab.cat/record/67881
dc.identifier
urn:10.1073/pnas.0813385106
dc.identifier
urn:oai:ddd.uab.cat:67881
dc.identifier
urn:pmid:19918076
dc.identifier
urn:scopus_id:73949111338
dc.identifier
urn:wos_id:000272254400041
dc.identifier
urn:altmetric_id:1366725
dc.identifier
urn:oai:egreta.uab.cat:publications/9aa90772-cec8-4e95-b6ba-687fad3b6e33
dc.identifier
urn:pmc-uid:2777955
dc.identifier
urn:pmcid:PMC2777955
dc.identifier
urn:oai:pubmedcentral.nih.gov:2777955
dc.description.abstract
Premi a l'excel·lència investigadora. 2010
dc.description.abstract
Because of their physiological and life history characteristics, mammals exploit adaptive zones unavailable to ectothermic reptiles. Yet, they perform best in energyrich environments because their high and constant growth rates and their sustained levels of resting metabolism require continuous resource supply. In resource-limited ecosystems such as islands, therefore, reptiles frequently displace mammals because their slow and flexible growth rates and low metabolic rates permit them to operate effectively with low energy flow. An apparent contradiction of this general principle is the long- term persistence of certain fossil large mammals on energy-poor Mediterranean islands. The purpose of the present study is to uncover the developmental and physiological strategies that allowed fossil large mammals to cope with the low levels of resource supply that characterize insular ecosystems. Long-bone histology of Myotragus, a Plio-Pleistocene bovid from the Balearic Islands, reveals lamellarzonal tissue throughout cortex, a trait exclusive to ectothermic reptiles. The bone microstructure indicates that Myotragus grew unlike any other mammal but similar to crocodiles at slow and flexible rates, ceased growth periodically, and attained somatic maturity extremely late by about 12 years. This developmental pattern denotes that Myotragus, much like extant reptiles, synchronized its metabolic requirements with fluctuating resource levels. Our results suggest that developmental and physiological plasticity was crucial to the survival of this and, perhaps, other large mammals on resource-limited Mediterranean Islands, yet it eventually led to their extinction through a major predator, Homo sapiens.
dc.format
application/pdf
dc.language
eng
dc.publisher
dc.relation
PNAS. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America ; Vol. 106, Núm. 48 (2009), p. 20354 -20358
dc.rights
open access
dc.rights
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dc.rights
https://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
dc.subject
PREI 2010
dc.subject
Paleohistology
dc.subject
Mammals
dc.subject
Myotragus
dc.subject
Physiology
dc.subject
Life history
dc.title
Slow life history and physiological plasticity : survival strategies of a large mammal in a resource-poor environment
dc.type
Article


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