Publication: Paleoecology and diversity of Pliocene to Pleistocene fossorial mammals in the Pampean region of Argentina based on a quantitative analysis of fossil burrows
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Elsevier BV
Abstract
Pliocene and Pleistocene sedimentary successions in the Pampean region of Argentina contain abundant and
diverse fossil mammalian burrows. In this paper, we report fossil burrows from eight localities from near Miramar
to the northern area of Mar del Plata, spanning the Early Pliocene to the Late Pleistocene, and analyze
burrow size patterns. The minimum width of each fossil burrow was measured as an indicator of its diameter.
Available allometric equations for extant burrowing vertebrates were used to estimate the body size of potential
producers based on burrow diameter. Size distribution patterns indicate that, in the Early Pliocene to Early
Pleistocene levels, small burrows (attributed to rodents, typotheres, and small armadillos) were abundant, while
medium- to large-sized burrows (attributed to large cingulates) were less common. In the Middle to Late
Pleistocene levels, small burrows are very scarce, and medium-sized burrows are most abundant, together with
giant burrows (attributed to ground sloths). Our findings indicate a significant size diversity for Pliocene–Pleistocene
burrowing mammals in the studied area, from small rodents to giant ground sloths. Although present
in Pliocene to Early Pleistocene times, the largest ground sloths began to build subterranean galleries only later
in the Middle to Late Pleistocene. Small burrowers were comparatively less active during that time. These
patterns are discussed in the light of paleoclimate and paleoecology of the putative guild of extinct burrowers, to
develop working hypotheses for future studies. A paleoclimatic shift from Pliocene Climate Optimum to more
arid and colder conditions from the Late Pliocene to Late Pleistocene, and the incursion of large predators to the
region, are proposed as major factors promoting large ground sloths to adopt a fossorial lifestyle.