Localisation
ACIS
Éditeur
The University of Arizona Press
Année de publication:
1984
Lieu de publication
USA
Description physique:
[7 p.] ; 29 cm
Numéro d'appel
VF 2755
Pays concernés
Pacific Region
Langue
English
Identifiant de dossier:
823
Ancien numéro d'identification PEIN:
50635
Notes générales
Invasive Species Verterbrates Literature Review|Article kept at Greg's collection
Disponible en ligne
Résumé
Holocene fossils document the extinction of hundreds of bird species on Pacific islands during prehistoric human occupation. Human hunting is implicated in these extinctions, but the impact of hunting is difficult to disentangle from the effects of other changes induced by humans, including habitat destruction and the introduction of other mammalian predators. Here, we use data from bones collected at a natural sand dune site and associated archaeological middens in New Zealand to show that, having controlled for differences in body mass and family membership (and hence for variation in life-history traits related to population growth rate), birds that were more intensively hunted by prehistoric humans had a higher probability of extinction. This result cannot be attributed to preservation biases and provides clear evidence that selective hunting contributed significantly to prehistoric bird extinctions at this site.
Localisation
ACIS
Éditeur
The University of Arizona Press
Année de publication:
1984
Lieu de publication
USA
Description physique:
[7 p.] ; 29 cm
Numéro d'appel
VF 2755
Pays concernés
Pacific Region
Langue
English
Identifiant de dossier:
823
Ancien numéro d'identification PEIN:
50635
Notes générales
Invasive Species Verterbrates Literature Review|Article kept at Greg's collection
Dossier créé: 01-Mar-2000
Dossier modifié: 18-Mar-2022