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Prehistoric Americas
American Extinction
BBC News, 25 November 2004
New evidence casts doubt on the theory that sabre-toothed cats,
mammoths and other big North American mammals were driven to
extinction by human hunting.
Genetic analysis of bison remains shows their populations
started to crash around 37,000 years ago - long before humans
arrived in the New World [even given the disputed maximum 30,000
years limit for their first arrival].
Researchers claim that climate change and other factors are more
likely culprits in the extinction.
An international team has published its findings in Science
magazine.
Date conflict
Until as recently as 20,000 years ago, North America had a range
of large mammals to rival the wildlife of present-day Africa.
The continent was home to woolly mammoth and mastodon, horses,
camels, giant ground sloths and bear-sized beavers, as well as
sabre-tooths.
By about 10,000 years ago, most of these animals were gone. Some
70 North American species disappeared - three-quarters of them large
mammals.
This so-called "megafaunal extinction" has been blamed by some
on human hunters who appear in North America around 12,000 years
ago.
But the latest research seriously questions this hypothesis.
Scientists extracted mitochondrial DNA from 442 bison remains found
in the US, including Alaska; and in Canada, Siberia and China.
Mitochondrial DNA comes from the cell's "power houses" and is
inherited through the maternal line only.
Keep refrigerated
Some of the best-preserved material used in the study was
unearthed from beneath the Alaskan permafrost by gold miners, some
of whom even kept the remains refrigerated until the scientists came
to claim them.
Scientists stand a much better chance of extracting useful DNA
sequences from such frozen remains.
From this ancient genetic material, Alan Cooper at the
University of Oxford, UK, and colleagues were able to reconstruct a
genetic history of bison over a period of around 150,000 years.
The human hunting theory has been left out in the cold
Co-author Dr Beth Shapiro, also at Oxford, told the BBC News
website: "When people try to reconstruct processes that happened in
the past, they devise models based on the genetics of modern
populations and extrapolate backwards in time.
"But because we have ancient DNA from the specimens, we can
actually look at slices of time and see what the genetic diversity
of that population was."
Using mathematical analysis, the researchers were able to
extract information about bison population size through time.
Ancestral journey
During the late Pleistocene and Holocene Epochs, bison roamed
across a territory called Beringia, an ice-free refuge that
stretched from eastern Siberia to the north-west of Canada.
Until around 37,000 years ago, there was a large, diverse
population living in Beringia. But after this date, the population's
genetic diversity began to decline dramatically.
The fall in numbers coincides with a warm period in which the
steppe tundra that bison like was covered by forests. These forests
may have acted as a barrier to bison dispersal and would have
provided few sources of food.
The DNA came from over 400 remains, recent and ancient
This warm period was followed by cold, arid conditions.
"Some component of these ecological changes may have been
sufficient to stress bison populations across Beringia," the
researchers write in their research paper.
But John Alroy, a palaeobiologist at the University of
California, Santa Barbara, told Science: "I think the interpretation
is overblown and not supported by the data."
He points out that, in other areas, bison have managed to shrug
off dramatic shifts in climate.
The results show that modern bison are distinct from ancient
Beringian bison. They are descended from bison that spread southward
through an ice-free corridor from Beringia perhaps as early as
100,000 years ago.