SCRAPS FROM AN OWLS TABLE - PREDATOR ACTIVITY AS A SIGNIFICANT TAPHONOMIC PROCESS NEWLY RECOGNIZED FROM NEW-ZEALAND QUATERNARY DEPOSITS

被引:30
作者
WORTHY, TH [1 ]
HOLDAWAY, RN [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV CANTERBURY,DEPT ZOOL,CHRISTCHURCH 1,NEW ZEALAND
来源
ALCHERINGA | 1994年 / 18卷 / 3-4期
关键词
AVIAN QUATERNARY FOSSILS; PREDATOR TAPHONOMY; LAUGHING OWL; SCELOGLAUX; NEW ZEALAND;
D O I
10.1080/03115519408619497
中图分类号
Q91 [古生物学];
学科分类号
0709 ; 070903 ;
摘要
A fossil bone deposit from a cliff flanking the Tiropahi River, Westland, South Island, New Zealand, was dated at 17,340 +/- 140 radiocarbon years BP. The taphonomy suggests that the deposit was accumulated by a predator. Site characteristics, prey size and bone damage patterns (greenstick fractures and evidence of digestion) suggest the predator was the extinct or near-extinct Laughing Owl Sceloglaux albifacies. The species assemblage represented by the fossils show that Sceloglaux was an opportunistic predator whose diet included birds, bats, frogs, skinks, geckos, and fish. The dominant prey were nocturnal ground-frequenting birds, particularly shearwaters and prions. The preferred habitats of the prey species and the deposit's age suggest that the river valley near the fossil site was forested, with areas of shrubland and grassland, during the coldest part of the Otiran Glaciation.
引用
收藏
页码:229 / 245
页数:17
相关论文
共 52 条
[1]  
Anderson A., 1989, PRODIGIOUS BIRDS MOA
[2]  
ANDERSON S H, 1992, Notornis, V39, P69
[3]   SMALL MAMMAL BONE ACCUMULATIONS PRODUCED BY MAMMALIAN CARNIVORES [J].
ANDREWS, P ;
EVANS, EMN .
PALEOBIOLOGY, 1983, 9 (03) :289-307
[4]  
Andrews P., 1990, OWLS CAVES FOSSILS P
[5]  
[Anonymous], 1968, EAGLES HAWKS FALCONS
[6]  
ATKINSON IAE, 1991, 20 ACT C INT ORN, P127
[7]  
Baird Robert F., 1991, P267
[8]  
BELL BD, 1978, HERPETOLOGICA, V34, P340
[9]  
Brain C. K., 1969, S AFRICAN ARCHAEOLOG, V24, P52
[10]  
Buller WL, 1888, HIST BIRDS NZ