Winter temperature and forest cover have shaped red deer distribution in Europe and the Ural Mountains since the Late Pleistocene
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NIEDZIALKOWSKA, Magdalena, DOAN, Karolina, GORNY, Marcin, SYKUT, Maciej, STEFANIAK, Krzysztof, PIOTROWSKA, Natalia, JEDRZEJEWSKA, Bogumila, RIDUŞ, Bogdan, PAWELCZYK, Slawomira, MACKIEWICZ, Pawel, SCHMOLCKE, Ulrichi, KOSINTSEV, Pavel, MAKOWIECKI, Daniel, CHARNIAUSKI, Maxim, KRASNODEBSKI, Dariusz, RANNAMAE, Eve, SAARMA, Urmas, ARAKELYAN, Marine, MANASERYAN, Ninna H., TITOV, Vadim, HULVA, Pavel, BĂLĂȘESCU, Adrian, FYFE, Ralph, WOODBRIDGE, Jessie, TRANTALIDOU, Katerina, DIMITRIJEVIC, Vesna M., KOVALCHUK, Oleksandr, WILCZYNSKI, Jaroslaw, OBADA, Theodor F., LIPECKI, Grzegorz, ARABEY, Alesia, STANKOVIC, Anna. Winter temperature and forest cover have shaped red deer distribution in Europe and the Ural Mountains since the Late Pleistocene. In: Journal of Biogeography, 2021, nr. 1(48), pp. 147-159. ISSN 0305-0270. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.13989
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Journal of Biogeography
Numărul 1(48) / 2021 / ISSN 0305-0270 /ISSNe 1365-2699

Winter temperature and forest cover have shaped red deer distribution in Europe and the Ural Mountains since the Late Pleistocene

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.13989

Pag. 147-159

Niedzialkowska Magdalena1, Doan Karolina23, Gorny Marcin1, Sykut Maciej1, Stefaniak Krzysztof4, Piotrowska Natalia5, Jedrzejewska Bogumila1, Riduş Bogdan6, Pawelczyk Slawomira5, Mackiewicz Pawel4, Schmolcke Ulrichi7, Kosintsev Pavel8, Makowiecki Daniel9, Charniauski Maxim10, Krasnodebski Dariusz11, Rannamae Eve12, Saarma Urmas12, Arakelyan Marine13, Manaseryan Ninna H.14, Titov Vadim15, Hulva Pavel16, Bălășescu Adrian17, Fyfe Ralph18, Woodbridge Jessie18, Trantalidou Katerina19, Dimitrijevic Vesna M.20, Kovalchuk Oleksandr21, Wilczynski Jaroslaw22, Obada Theodor F.23, Lipecki Grzegorz22, Arabey Alesia24, Stankovic Anna25
 
1 Mammal Research Institute Polish Academy of Sciences, Białowieża,
2 Warsaw University,
3 Polish Academy of Sciences,
4 University of Wroclaw,
5 Silesian University of Technology,
6 Yuriy Fedkovych National University of Chernivtsi,
7 Centre for Baltic and Scandinavian Archaeology (ZBSA), Schleswig,
8 Institute of Plant and Animal Ecology, the Ural Branch of RAS,
9 Nicolaus Copernicus University,
10 Institute of History, National Academy of Sciences of Belarus,
11 Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw,
12 University of Tartu, Estonia,
13 Yerevan State University,
14 National Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Armenia,
15 Southern Scientific Center, RAS,
16 Charles University, Prague,
17 Institute of Archeology "Vasile Pârvan" of the Romanian Academy,
18 University of Plymouth,
19 Ephorate of Palaeoanthropology-Speleology, Athens,
20 University of Belgrade,
21 National University of Life and Environmental Sciences of Ukraine,
22 Institute of Systematics and Evolution of Animals, Polish Academy of Sciences, Kraków,
23 Institute of Zoology,
24 National Historical Museum of the Republic of Belarus,
25 Institute of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Polish Academy of Sciences
 
 
Disponibil în IBN: 1 aprilie 2021


Rezumat

Aim: The Expansion-Contraction model has been used to explain the responses of species to climatic changes. During periods of unfavourable climatic conditions, species retreat to refugia from where they may later expand. This paper focuses on the palaeoecology of red deer over the past 54 ka across Europe and the Urals, to reveal patterns of change in their range and explore the role of environmental conditions in determining their distribution. Location: Europe and western Asia to 63°E. Taxon: Red deer (Cervus elaphus). Methods: We collected 984 records of radiocarbon-dated red deer subfossils from the Late Pleistocene and the Holocene, including 93 original dates. For each deer sample we compiled climatic and biome type data for the corresponding time intervals. Results: During the last 54 ka changes in red deer range in Europe and the Urals were asynchronous and differed between western and eastern Europe and western Asia due to different environmental conditions in those regions. The range of suitable areas for deer during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) was larger than previously thought and covered vast regions not only in southern but also in western and eastern Europe. Throughout the period investigated the majority of specimens inhabited forests in the temperate climatic zone. The contribution of forests in deer localities significantly decreased during the last 4 ka, due to deforestation of Europe caused by humans. Mean January temperature was the main limiting factor for species distribution. Over 90% of the samples were found in areas where mean January temperature was above −10°C. Main conclusions: Red deer response to climatic oscillations are in agreement with the Expansion-Contraction model but in contradiction to the statement of only the southernmost LGM refugia of the species. During the last 54 ka red deer occurred mostly in forests of the temperate climatic zone.

Cuvinte-cheie
environmental niche modelling, expansion-contraction model, forest habitat, Holocene, January temperature, Last Glacial Maximum refugia, palaeoecology, Radiocarbon dating, temperate climatic zone, ungulates