Distribution and extinction of ungulates during the Holocene of the southern Levant

The southern Levant (Israel, Palestinian Authority and Jordan) has been continuously and extensively populated by succeeding phases of human cultures for the past 15,000 years. The long human impact on the ancient landscape has had great ecological consequences, and has caused continuous and acceler...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2009-04, Vol.4 (4), p.e5316-e5316
Hauptverfasser: Tsahar, Ella, Izhaki, Ido, Lev-Yadun, Simcha, Bar-Oz, Guy
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Izhaki, Ido
Lev-Yadun, Simcha
Bar-Oz, Guy
description The southern Levant (Israel, Palestinian Authority and Jordan) has been continuously and extensively populated by succeeding phases of human cultures for the past 15,000 years. The long human impact on the ancient landscape has had great ecological consequences, and has caused continuous and accelerating damage to the natural environment. The rich zooarchaeological data gathered at the area provide a unique opportunity to reconstruct spatial and temporal changes in wild species distribution, and correlate them with human demographic changes. Zoo-archaeological data (382 animal bone assemblages from 190 archaeological sites) from various time periods, habitats and landscapes were compared. The bone assemblages were sorted into 12 major cultural periods. Distribution maps showing the presence of each ungulate species were established for each period. The first major ungulate extinction occurred during the local Iron Age (1,200-586 BCE), a period characterized by significant human population growth. During that time the last of the largest wild ungulates, the hartebeest (Alcelaphus buselaphus), aurochs (Bos primigenius) and the hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibius) became extinct, followed by a shrinking distribution of forest-dwelling cervids. A second major wave of extinction occurred only in the 19th and 20th centuries CE. Furthermore, a negative relationship was found between the average body mass of ungulate species that became extinct during the Holocene and their extinction date. It is thus very likely that the intensified human activity through habitat destruction and uncontrolled hunting were responsible for the two major waves of ungulate extinction in the southern Levant during the late Holocene.
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subjects Alcelaphus buselaphus
Animals
Archaeological sites
Archaeology
Artiodactyla
Biodiversity
Biology
Body mass
Bos primigenius
Cervidae
Coastal plains
Comparative analysis
Demographics
Ecological effects
Ecology/Community Ecology and Biodiversity
Ecology/Conservation and Restoration Ecology
Ecology/Spatial and Landscape Ecology
Ecosystem
Endangered & extinct species
Environmental degradation
Environmental impact
Evolutionary Biology/Evolutionary Ecology
Extinct species
Extinction
Extinction, Biological
Farm buildings
Fossils
Hippopotamus
Hippopotamus amphibius
Historic sites
History, Ancient
Holocene
Human beings
Human impact
Human influences
Human populations
Humans
Hunting
Influence on nature
Information management
Israel
Israel-Arab conflicts
Jordan
Laboratories
Landscape
Mass extinction theory
Neolithic
Nomads
Population
Population growth
Science education
Sediments
Spatial distribution
Species extinction
Trends
Ungulates
Vegetation
title Distribution and extinction of ungulates during the Holocene of the southern Levant
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