Tough Times at La Brea: Tooth Breakage in Large Carnivores of the Late Pleistocene
- 23 July 1993
- journal article
- other
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 261 (5120) , 456-459
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.261.5120.456
Abstract
One million to two million years ago, most of today's large, predatory mammals coexisted with larger extinct species, such as saber-toothed cats and giant running bears. Comparisons of tooth fracture frequencies from modern and Pleistocene carnivores imply that predator-prey dynamics and interspecific interactions must have been substantially different 36,000 to 10,000 years ago. Tooth fracture frequencies of four Rancho La Brea species—dire wolf, coyote, saber-toothed cat, and American lion—were about three times that of extant carnivores. Consequently, these findings suggest that these species utilized carcasses more fully and likely competed more intensely for food than present-day large carnivores.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Iterative evolution of hypercarnivory in canids (Mammalia: Carnivora): evolutionary interactions among sympatric predatorsPaleobiology, 1991
- Incidence of Tooth Breakage Among Large, Predatory MammalsThe American Naturalist, 1988
- Trophic diversity in past and present guilds of large predatory mammalsPaleobiology, 1988
- The von Bertalanffy growth model fitted to Planigale tenuirostris (Marsupialia: Dasyuridae) post‐weaning dataJournal of Zoology, 1987
- Locomotor diversity within past and present guilds of large predatory mammalsPaleobiology, 1985
- Size frequency analysis of tooth wear in spotted hyaenasCrocuta crocutaSouth African Journal of Zoology, 1984
- Wolf Predation on Elk in Riding Mountain National Park, ManitobaThe Journal of Wildlife Management, 1983
- Functional analysis of sabertooth cranial morphologyPaleobiology, 1980
- Age determination of the African lion (Panthera leo)Journal of Zoology, 1978
- Behavioral implications of saber-toothed felid morphologyPaleobiology, 1976