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Dryad

Raw isotope values from fossil herbivore enamel from sites located below 37° latitude within the contiguous United States

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Apr 28, 2021 version files 126.69 KB

Abstract

Paleoecological interpretations are based on our understanding of dietary and habitat preferences of fossil taxa. While morphology provides approximations of diets, stable isotope proxies provide insights into the realized diets of animals. We present a synthesis of the isotopic ecologies (δ13C from tooth enamel) of North American mammalian herbivores since ~7 Ma. We ask: 1) Do morphological interpretations of dietary behavior agree with stable isotope proxy data?; 2) Are grazing taxa specialists, or is grazing a means to broaden the dietary niche?; and, 3) How is dietary niche breadth attained in taxa at the local level? We demonstrate that while brachydont taxa are specialized as browsers, hypsodont taxa often have broader diets that included more browse consumption than previously anticipated. It has long been accepted that morphology imposes limits on diet; this synthesis supports prior work that herbivores with “grazing” adaptions, such as hypsodont teeth, have the ability to consume grass but are also able to eat other foods. Notably, localized dietary breadth of even generalist taxa can be narrow (~30 to 60% of a taxon’s overall breadth). This synthesis demonstrates that “grazing-adapted” taxa are varied in their diets across space and time, and this flexibility may reduce competition among ancient herbivores.