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New Source of Dietary Data for Extinct Herbivores

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

William A. Akersten
Affiliation:
Idaho Museum of Natural History, Idaho State University, Post Office Box 8096, Pocatello, Idaho 83209 USA
Theresea M. Foppe
Affiliation:
Composition Analysis Laboratory, Range Science Department, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523 USA
George T. Jefferson
Affiliation:
Rancho La Brea Section, George C. Page Museum, 5801 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, California 90036 USA

Abstract

The teeth of many large herbivores contain “pockets” (fossettes, fossettids, etc.) which entrap impacted samples of food (dental boluses) during mastication. These do not preserve well in most fossil deposits, but at Rancho La Brea, paleobotanical remains survive essentially intact and dental boluses from late Pleistocene forms are amenable to microhistological analysis. Of the identifiable bolus contents, those from Bison antiquus averaged 87% nonmonocotyledons; from Camelops hesternus, 90% nonmonocotyledons; and from Equus occidentalis (one specimen), 56% nonmonocotyledons. A control study on modern Bison bison shows that the boluses contain somewhat lower percentages of monocotyledons than do alimentary samples from the same individuals. However, this accounts for only a part of the very high percentage of nonmonocotyledons in the boluses of the extinct Bison. We conclude that the populations of B. antiquus and C. hesternus represented at Rancho La Brea probably fed little on grasses and that there is enough indirect evidence to suggest that the same may be true for other populations of these taxa. The Equus data are not sufficient to do more than question the usual assumption that Pleistocene horses were always obligate grass eaters.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
University of Washington

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