10.5061/DRYAD.HP38CT1
Martin, Jeff M.
Texas A&M University
Mead, Jim I.
University of Arizona
Barboza, Perry S.
Texas A&M University
Data from: Bison body size and climate change
Dryad
dataset
2019
Anthropocene
Late Pleistocene
Bison bison
body size change
Late Quaternary
Holocene
Bergmann's rule
2019-02-27T00:00:00Z
2019-02-27T00:00:00Z
en
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4019
331472 bytes
2
CC0 1.0 Universal (CC0 1.0) Public Domain Dedication
The relationship between body size and temperature of mammals is poorly
resolved, especially for large keystone species such as bison (Bison
bison). Bison are well-represented in the fossil record across North
America, which provides an opportunity to relate body size to climate
within a species. We measured the length of a leg bone (calcaneal tuber,
DstL) in 849 specimens from 60 localities that were dated by stratigraphy
and 14C decay. We estimated body mass (M) as: M = (DstL/11.49) 3. Average
annual temperature was estimated from δ18O values in the ice cores from
Greenland. Calcaneal tuber length of Bison declined over the last 40,000
years, that is, average body mass was 37% larger (910 ± 50 kg) than today
(665 ± 21 kg). Average annual temperature has warmed by 6°C since the Last
Glacial Maximum (~24-18 kya) and is predicted to further increase by 4°C
by the end of the 21st century. If body size continues to linearly respond
to global temperature, Bison body mass will likely decline by an
additional 46%, to 357 ± 54 kg, with an increase of 4°C globally. The rate
of mass loss is 41 ± 10 kg per °C increase of global temperature. Changes
in body size of Bison may be a result of migration, disease, or human
harvest but those effects are likely to be local and short-term and not
likely to persist over the long-time-scale of the fossil record. The
strong correspondence between body size of bison and air temperature is
more likely the result of persistent effects on the ability to grow and
the consequences of sustaining a large body mass in a warming environment.
Continuing rises in global temperature will likely depress body sizes of
bison, and perhaps other large grazers, without human intervention.
Bison body size and climate change datasetLocality information: name,
geologic age, latitude, longitude, specimen numbers, specimen voucher
list, locality summary statistics, GISP2 temperature, linear osteometrics,
species, elevation, etc.Bison_fullDB for MS.xlsx
North America