Pleistocene Megafaunal Collapse, Novel Plant Communities, and Enhanced Fire Regimes in North America

Demise of the Megafauna Approximately 10,000 years ago, the Pleistocene-Holocene deglaciation in North America produced widespread biotic and environmental change, including extinctions of megafauna, reorganization of plant communities, and increased wildfire. The causal links and sequences of these changes remain unclear. Gill et al. (p. 1100; see the Perspective by Johnson) unravel these connections in an analysis of pollen, charcoal, and the dung fungus Sporormiella from the sediments of Appleman Lake, Indiana. The decline in Pleistocene megafaunal population densities (inferred from fungal spore abundances) preceded both the formation of the lateglacial plant communities and a shift to an enhanced fire regime, thus contradicting hypotheses that invoke habitat change or extraterrestrial impact to explain the megafaunal extinction. The data suggest that population collapse and functional extinction of the megafauna preceded their final extinction by several thousand years. The decline in Pleistocene megafauna led to the formation of novel plant communities and increased fire. Although the North American megafaunal extinctions and the formation of novel plant communities are well-known features of the last deglaciation, the causal relationships between these phenomena are unclear. Using the dung fungus Sporormiella and other paleoecological proxies from Appleman Lake, Indiana, and several New York sites, we established that the megafaunal decline closely preceded enhanced fire regimes and the development of plant communities that have no modern analogs. The loss of keystone megaherbivores may thus have altered ecosystem structure and function by the release of palatable hardwoods from herbivory pressure and by fuel accumulation. Megafaunal populations collapsed from 14,800 to 13,700 years ago, well before the final extinctions and during the Bølling-Allerød warm period. Human impacts remain plausible, but the decline predates Younger Dryas cooling and the extraterrestrial impact event proposed to have occurred 12,900 years ago.

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