As grasses grew more common in Africa, most major mammal groups tried
grazing on them at times during the past 4 million years, but some of
the animals went extinct or switched back to browsing on trees and
shrubs, according to a study led by the University of Utah.
“It’s
as if in a city, there was a whole new genre of restaurant to try,” says
geochemist Thure Cerling, first and senior author of the study
published today by the journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
“This is a record of how different mammals responded. And almost all of
the mammals did an experiment in eating this new resource: grass.”
The
experiment peaked about 2 million years ago, says Cerling, a
distinguished professor of geology and geophysics. The only major group
that still mostly grazes grass is the bovids: cattle, buffalo, sheep,
wildebeest, hartebeest and some antelopes such as oryx and waterbucks.
The
study also revealed that the present isn’t necessarily the key to the
past in terms of what animals eat. Today, elephants and spiral-horned
antelope (elands, kudus and bushbuck) browse on trees and shrubs, but
the study showed that 2 million years ago, African elephants grazed on
grass and the antelopes had mixed diets with a lot of grass. Asian
elephants, which ate grass and were abundant in Africa 2 million years
ago, went extinct in Africa but survive in Asia, where they graze but
also browse trees and shrubs.
“That the diet of some of these
animals is different from that of the present was a surprise, and shows
the importance of challenging one’s assumptions when making ecological
reconstructions,” says study co-author and geologist Frank Brown, dean
of the University of Utah’s College of Mines and Earth Sciences.
Overall,
Cerling and colleagues wrote that the assemblages of grazing, browsing
and mixed-diet animals during the past 4 million years “are different
from any modern ecosystem in East or Central Africa.”
They found
the Turkana Basin of Kenya and Ethiopia had a much greater diversity of
mixed feeders – they browsed and grazed – from 4.1 million to 2.35
million years ago. From 2.35 million to 1 million years ago, there were
many more grazers than there are today. In the past 1 million years,
many grass grazers either switched to browsing trees and shrubs or went
extinct, leaving mostly bovids as grazers today.
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