Abstract
Heavy reliance on plants is rare in Carnivora and mostly limited to relatively small species in subtropical settings. The feeding behaviors of extinct cave bears living during Pleistocene cold periods at middle latitudes have been intensely studied using various approaches including isotopic analyses of fossil collagen. In contrast to cave bears from all other regions in Europe, some individuals from Romania show exceptionally high δ15N values that might be indicative of meat consumption. Herbivory on plants with high δ15N values cannot be ruled out based on this method, however. Here we apply an approach using the δ15N values of individual amino acids from collagen that offsets the baseline δ15N variation among environments. The analysis yielded strong signals of reliance on plants for Romanian cave bears based on the δ15N values of glutamate and phenylalanine. These results could suggest that the high variability in bulk collagen δ15N values observed among cave bears in Romania reflects niche partitioning but in a general trophic context of herbivory.
Highlights
Bears represent the largest terrestrial members within the Carnivora alive today and the vast majority of them have carnivorous or omnivorous feeding habits
We aim at testing the two hypotheses that high collagen δ15N values observed for cave bears in the Romanian region were attributed to (i) omnivorous/carnivorous feeding behavior associated with a trophic level effect as a corollary or (ii) consumption of plants with high bulk δ15N values
The isotopic results that were obtained on single amino acids (AA) in the present study are likely to apply to most other cave bears from Romania, including the ones claimed to have been omnivores, carnivores or piscivores, based on the high δ15N values of their bulk collagen
Summary
Bears represent the largest terrestrial members within the Carnivora alive today and the vast majority of them have carnivorous or omnivorous feeding habits. We aim at testing the two hypotheses that high collagen δ15N values observed for cave bears in the Romanian region were attributed to (i) omnivorous/carnivorous feeding behavior associated with a trophic level effect as a corollary or (ii) consumption of plants with high bulk δ15N values. To this end, δ15N values of individual AAs in collagen were measured for adult cave bears from several sites in this region (Fig. 1).
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