1. A multimillennial climatic context for the megafaunal extinctions in Madagascar and Mascarene Islands
- Author
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Jingyao Zhao, Hubert B. Vonhof, Gayatri Kathayat, Ashish Sinha, Peng Hu, Christoph Spötl, Pengzhen Duan, Youfeng Ning, Hanying Li, Aurèle Anquetil André, Ny Riavo G. Voarintsoa, Hai Cheng, R. Lawrence Edwards, Xianglei Li, Arnaud Meunier, Jayant Biswas, and Lijuan Sha
- Subjects
Climatology ,010506 paleontology ,Multidisciplinary ,Ecology ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,SciAdv r-articles ,Climate change ,Context (language use) ,15. Life on land ,01 natural sciences ,Indian ocean ,Oceanography ,Geography ,13. Climate action ,Megafauna ,Ecosystem ,14. Life underwater ,Research Articles ,Holocene ,Research Article ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Human activities within the context of a drying trend triggered the megafaunal extinctions in Madagascar and Mascarene Islands., Madagascar and the Mascarene Islands of Mauritius and Rodrigues underwent catastrophic ecological and landscape transformations, which virtually eliminated their entire endemic vertebrate megafauna during the past millennium. These ecosystem changes have been alternately attributed to either human activities, climate change, or both, but parsing their relative importance, particularly in the case of Madagascar, has proven difficult. Here, we present a multimillennial (approximately the past 8000 years) reconstruction of the southwest Indian Ocean hydroclimate variability using speleothems from the island of Rodrigues, located ∼1600 km east of Madagascar. The record shows a recurring pattern of hydroclimate variability characterized by submillennial-scale drying trends, which were punctuated by decadal-to-multidecadal megadroughts, including during the late Holocene. Our data imply that the megafauna of the Mascarenes and Madagascar were resilient, enduring repeated past episodes of severe climate stress, but collapsed when a major increase in human activity occurred in the context of a prominent drying trend.
- Published
- 2020
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