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Cougars’
diverse diet helped them survive the mass extinction that wiped out the
saber-tooth cat, American lion
Cougars’
diverse diet helped them survive the mass extinction that wiped out the
saber-tooth cat, American lion
Date:
April 22,
2014
Source:
Vanderbilt University
Summary:
Cougars may have survived the mass extinction that
took place about 12,000 years ago because they were not particular about what
they ate, unlike their more finicky cousins the saber-tooth cat and American
lion who perished, according a new analysis of the microscopic wear marks on
the teeth of fossil cougars, saber-tooth cats and American lions.
....................
Cougars may have survived the mass extinction that took
place about 12,000 years ago because they were not particular about what they
ate, unlike their more finicky cousins -- the saber-tooth cat and American
lion. Both perished along with the woolly mammoth and many of the other
supersized mammals that walked Earth during the late Pleistocene.
That is the
conclusion of a new analysis of the microscopic wear marks on the teeth of
cougars, saber-tooth cats and American lions described in the April 23 issue of
the journal Biology Letters.
"Before
the Late Pleistocene extinction six species of large cats roamed the plains and
forests of North America. Only two -- the cougar and jaguar -- survived. The
goal of our study was to examine the possibility that dietary factors can
explain the cougar's survival," said Larisa R.G. DeSantis, assistant
professor of earth and environmental sciences at Vanderbilt University, who
co-authored the study with Ryan Haupt at the University of Wyoming.
For their
investigation, DeSantis and Haupt employed a new technique called dental
microwear texture analysis. DMTA uses a confocal microscope to produce a
three-dimensional image of the surface of a tooth. The image is then analyzed
for microscopic wear patterns. The analysis of the teeth of modern carnivores,
including hyenas, cheetahs and lions has established that the meals an animal
consumes during the last few weeks of its life leave telltale marks. Chowing
down on red meat, for example, produces small parallel scratches while chomping
on bones adds larger, deeper pits. The researchers analyzed the teeth of 50
fossil and modern cougars, and compared them with the teeth of saber-tooth cats
and American lions excavated from the La Brea Tar Pits in Los Angeles and the
teeth of modern African carnivores including cheetahs, lions and hyenas.
Previously,
DeSantis and others found that the dental wear patterns of the extinct American
lions closely resembled those of modern cheetahs, which are extremely finicky
eaters that mostly consume tender meat and rarely gnaw on bones. Saber-tooth
cats were instead similar to African lions and chewed on both flesh and bone.
Among the La
Brea cougars the researchers found significantly greater variation between
individuals than they did in the other large cats, including saber-toothed
cats. Some of the cougars show wear patterns similar to those of the finicky
eaters but on others they found wear patterns closer to those of modern hyenas,
which consume almost the entire body of their prey, bones included.
"This
suggests that the Pleistocene cougars had a 'more generalized' dietary
behavior," DeSantis said. "Specifically, they likely killed and often
fully consumed their prey, more so than the large cats that went extinct."
This is consistent with the dietary behavior and dental wear patterns of modern
cougars, which are opportunistic predators and scavengers of abandoned carrion
and fully consume the carcasses of small and medium-sized prey, a
"variable dietary behavior that may have actually been a key to their
survival."
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by Vanderbilt University. The original article was
written by David Salisbury. Note: Materials may be edited for content and
length.
Cite This
Page:
Vanderbilt University.
"Cougars’ diverse diet helped them survive the mass extinction that wiped
out the saber-tooth cat, American lion." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 22
April 2014. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/04/140422202047.htm>.