The trees that miss the mammoths (2011)(af-legacy-prd.americanforests.org) |
The trees that miss the mammoths (2011)(af-legacy-prd.americanforests.org) |
In my neighborhood the big Osage oranges were planted in the late 1800s along the property lines, so they are long lived. A once in a hundred year weather event would be enough to keep a population going.
The concept of a tree that propagates by tornado is hilarious, but somehow not unbelievable.
The article notes that it was nowhere near enough, and with the loss of its primary dispersers the once-widespread genus had enormously shrunk in variety and range both before it got recycled as natural fencing:
> According to my field guide, Osage-orange has a limited natural range in the Red River region of east-central Texas, southeastern Oklahoma, and adjacent Arkansas.
> [...]
> fossils tell us that Osage-orange was much more widespread and diverse before the megafaunal extinctions. Back then, Osage-oranges could be found north up to Ontario, and there were seven, not just one, species in the Osage-orange genus, Maclura.
(sp: there are 12 extant species of Maclura according to the wiki — most of them from asia though one is native to south america and one central america, I expect the author implied "in NA")
Being an anachronistic species is not necessarily an inevitable decline. I have a magnolia tree in my front yard — the leaves and petals are frustratingly indestructible, because it was once beetle-pollinated long before bees existed. I wonder how many anachronistic species will do well in the future changed climate. I know dawn redwood has a small range now, in China, but their fossils are found in Alaska.
Glad to see them take on the "pristine forest" thing, ecologies are complex open systems. Human activity doesn't do them any favors, for sure, but also there's no edenic prior state to which they can be returned. The only way out is forward.
There's a lot of discussion if these were adaptations to browsing by moa.
http://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-Bio32Tuat-t1-bo...
The best evidence now is that a meteor strike on the Canadian ice shield wiped out most of the megafauna, and the Clovis culture, at one stroke, initiating the 1200-year Younger Dryas cold spell. The damage reached as far as Syria and southern Africa, leaving a layer of platinum-enriched dust.
But then I'm not claiming that it was all Homo sapiens - rather, climatic change had already placed species under stress, then man was the final stressor that pushed them over the brink.
Beware that the wikipedia page on the topic is "curated" by a retired busybody professor who reverts corrections that do not favor his bias.
This does not mean humans have not also participated in numerous extinctions, ancient and modern. It only means we cannot be responsible for the sudden American extinctions.
Given more time, we would no doubt have wiped out many of the species. But horses and camels survive on other continents, exposed to humans. Why would Americans have, uniquely, chosen them to wipe out?
This is a may, not a can: a trivially fitting hypothesis is that the clovis culture was based around that megafauna, and when it finally went through everything it ended with them.
This also explains the synchronicity of the disappearance, because any megafauna hunted to extinction would lead the hunters to fall back on the next genera, increasing hunting pressure on it and thus accelerating its disappearance.
> Given more time, we would no doubt have wiped out many of the species. But horses and camels survive on other continents, exposed to humans. Why would Americans have, uniquely, chosen them to wipe out?
Either coevolution (meaning the megafauna would have had the time to adapt its reaction pattern to the rise of humanity), or environments which allow them to evade hunters and avoid extinction which may not have been available in the americas.
Coexisting for thousands of years, then suddenly wiping out 32 genera all in the same century beggars belief.
As I'm a New Zealander, I'm far more familiar with mass extinctions in NZ, and let me just say, to paraphrase a Smash Mouth song, well, after the arrival of humans, the extinctions start coming and they don't stop coming.
For a few reasons.
1) Introduction of the kiore (Polynesian rat) - while now, somewhat ironically, nearly extinct in NZ due to competition by Norwegian and black rats, its predation of chicks and eggs was instrumental in pushing some endemic species to extinction.
2) Unsustainable hunting, and collection of eggs. The most prominent example is the thousands of moa and their eggs found in the middens of what was probably the first archaic Māori (aka "moa hunter") settlement on Te Waipounamu/South Island. Given that moa, like other large birds, were slow breeders, it was inevitable that moa populations would collapse shortly after human arrival given the level of exploitation seen in the middens.[1]
3) Fire. Archaic Māori used fire to drive forest dwelling moa for hunting, which destroyed large areas of old forest that were stable, but unable to re-establish under changed climatic conditions. For an example, the Mackenzie Basin[2], and the Torlesse Range[3], both now known for their extensive tussocklands, were previously covered in dense forest, which no longer existed by the time of European colonisation. With a loss of habitat comes increased risk of extinction.
4) Desperation - as moa became scarcer, the archaic Māori switched to alternative food species, and extinctions rapidly followed (e.g., the flightless South Island goose[4]). This is also the period where (most archaeologists agree) the ancestors of the Moriori[5] departed from the South Island and settled the Chatham Islands/Rēkohu, as archaic Māori society entered collapse.
I highly recommend this book[6] for insights into at least one confirmed example of the black hole theory. You can also explore the art of that book in the national museum's collections[7]. The fact that there's six pages of that art is rather depressing.
[1]: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/258344644_History_o...
[2]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mackenzie_Basin#Environmental_...
[3]: https://www.arthurspass.com/index.php?page=225
[4]: https://nzbirdsonline.org.nz/species/south-island-goose
[5]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moriori
[6]: https://www.tepapa.govt.nz/about/te-papa-press/te-papa-press...