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Type: Article
Published: 2013-12-23
Page range: 534–548
Abstract views: 55
PDF downloaded: 34

Bird fossils from Ankilitelo Cave: Inference about Holocene environmental changes in Southwestern Madagasca

Science and Education, Field Museum of Natural History, 1400 South Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, Illinois 60605, USA; and Association Vahatra, BP 3972, Antananarivo 101, Madagascar; and Department of Anthropology, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755, USA
Association Vahatra, BP 3972, Antananarivo 101, Madagascar; and and Département de Biologie Animale, Université d’Antananarivo, BP 906, Antananarivo 101, Madagascar
Department of Anatomy, The Geisel School of Medicine, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755, USA; and Department of Anthropology, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755, USA
Ankilitelo Cave birds Aepyornis Monias benschi Numida meleagris fauna environmental shifts C14 dates

Abstract

The identifications of non-permineralized fossil bird bones recovered from Ankilitelo Cave in southwestern Madagascar are presented. Among the more than 560 elements recovered, 29 different taxa were identified, the vast majority being species that still occur in this region of the island. Eggshell remains from the extinct elephant bird (Family Aepyornithidae) and assigned to Aepyornis sp. were found at the site. Two identified extant taxa, Scopus umbretta and Monias benschi, no longer occur in the area immediately surrounding the cave. The available radiocarbon measurements of collagen from fossil bird bones and avian eggshell carbonate of recovered from the cave range from 13,270 Cal yr BP to modern times. Hence, the presumed ecological shifts that took place resulting in the disappearance or range contractions of these three taxa is within the Holocene and are presumed to be associated with natural climatic change and in more recent centuries associated human pressures. Information is also presented on the origin of guinea fowl (Numida) and inference on the period of colonization of Corvus albus on Madagascar.