Wildlife following people: A multidisciplinary assessment of the ancient colonization of the Mediterranean Basin by a long‐lived raptor

Marcos Moleón, E. Graciá, Nuria García, José M. Gil‐Sánchez, Raquel Godinho, Pedro Beja, Luís Palma, Joan Real, Antonio Hernández‐Matías, A. Román Muñoz, Eneko Arrondo, José A. Sánchez‐Zapata
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Abstract

Modern humans widely shaped present ecosystems through intentional and unintentional geographical redistribution of wildlife, both in historical and pre‐historical times. However, the patterns of ancient human‐mediated indirect changes in wildlife range are largely unknown, and the mechanisms behind them remain obscure. We used a multidisciplinary approach to (a) reconstruct the process of colonization of the Mediterranean Basin by a long‐lived bird of prey, the Bonelli's eagle (Aquila fasciata), and (b) test the hypothesis that this colonization was unintentionally favoured by anatomically modern humans through a release of competition by dominant species, primarily golden eagles (A. chrysaetos). The fossil record of Bonelli's eagles in the Mediterranean Basin was restricted to the last c. 50 ky. This timing matches the period of modern human presence in Europe. Distribution modelling showed that Bonelli's eagles find more suitable conditions in interglacial periods, while glacial maxima are largely unfavourable unless in coastal refugia. In agreement with this, all Bonelli's eagle's fossils were found in coastal areas, and demographic inference from genetic data revealed a drop in the effective population size by around the last glacial maximum. In today's communities, we found a strongly asymmetric competitive relationship between (subordinate) Bonelli's and (dominant) golden eagles, with the former occupying far more humanized areas than the latter both at the landscape scale and the local (i.e. nesting cliff) scale. Moreover, the nesting habitat overlap analysis indicated that, in the absence of the other species, a notably higher population of Bonelli's eagle, but not of golden eagle, could be expected. Our findings are consistent with the human‐mediated competitor release hypothesis, by which anatomically modern humans could have unintentionally favoured the large‐scale colonization by Bonelli's eagles of a previously competitively hostile Mediterranean Basin. Reconstructing the role of ancient humans in shaping present ecosystems may help to understand the historical, current and future population trajectories of competing species of conservation concern under the ongoing scenario of global environmental change. It also illustrates how human‐mediated apparent competition may promote large‐scale redistribution and colonization of wildlife, including long‐lived species. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.
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野生动物追随人类:对一种长寿猛禽在地中海盆地的远古殖民地的多学科评估
现代人类通过有意或无意地重新分配野生动物的地理分布,广泛地塑造了现在的生态系统,无论是在历史上还是在史前时期。然而,古人类间接改变野生动物分布范围的模式在很大程度上是未知的,其背后的机制也仍然模糊不清。我们采用多学科方法(a)重建了一种长寿鸟类--波涅利鹰(Aquila fasciata)在地中海盆地的殖民过程,并(b)检验了一种假设,即这种殖民是现代人类通过释放优势物种(主要是金雕)的竞争而无意间促成的。这个时间与现代人类在欧洲出现的时间相吻合。分布模型显示,博内利老鹰在间冰期能找到更合适的环境,而冰川期的最大值基本上是不利的,除非是在沿海避难所。在今天的群落中,我们发现(从属)波涅利鹰和(优势)金雕之间存在强烈的不对称竞争关系,无论是在景观尺度还是在局部(即筑巢悬崖)尺度上,前者占据的人化区域都远远多于后者。此外,筑巢栖息地重叠分析表明,在没有其他物种的情况下,预计波涅利鹰的数量会明显增加,而金雕的数量则不会增加。我们的研究结果与人类介导的竞争者释放假说相一致,通过这种假说,解剖学上的现代人类可能无意中促进了波涅利鹰在以前充满竞争敌意的地中海盆地的大规模殖民。重建古人类在塑造当前生态系统中的作用,可能有助于了解在全球环境不断变化的情况下,受保护的竞争物种的历史、当前和未来种群轨迹。它还说明了以人类为媒介的表面竞争如何促进野生动物(包括长寿物种)的大规模重新分布和殖民化。
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