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Isotopic and anatomical evidence of an herbivorous diet in the Early Tertiary giant bird Gastornis. Implications for the structure of Paleocene terrestrial ecosystems
Authors:D Angst  C Lécuyer  R Amiot  E Buffetaut  F Fourel  F Martineau  S Legendre  A Abourachid  A Herrel
Institution:1. UMR 5276 Laboratoire de Géologie de Lyon, Terre, Planètes et Environnement, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 / CNRS / Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon, 69622, Villeurbanne Cedex, France
2. Institut Universitaire de France, 103 Boulevard, Saint-Michel, 75005, Paris, France
3. Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, UMR 8538, Laboratoire de Géologie de l’Ecole Normale Supérieure, 75231, Paris Cedex 05, France
4. UMR 7179 / CNRS / MNHN Département d’Ecologie et de Gestion de la Biodiversité, Case postale 55, 75231, Paris Cedex 05, France
5. Evolutionary Morphology of Vertebrates, Ghent University, K.L. Ledeganckstraat 35, 9000, Gent, Belgium
Abstract:The mode of life of the early Tertiary giant bird Gastornis has long been a matter of controversy. Although it has often been reconstructed as an apex predator feeding on small mammals, according to other interpretations, it was in fact a large herbivore. To determine the diet of this bird, we analyze here the carbon isotope composition of the bone apatite from Gastornis and contemporaneous herbivorous mammals. Based on 13C-enrichment measured between carbonate and diet of carnivorous and herbivorous modern birds, the carbonate δ13C values of Gastornis bone remains, recovered from four Paleocene and Eocene French localities, indicate that this bird fed on plants. This is confirmed by a morphofunctional study showing that the reconstructed jaw musculature of Gastornis was similar to that of living herbivorous birds and unlike that of carnivorous forms. The herbivorous Gastornis was the largest terrestrial tetrapod in the Paleocene biota of Europe, unlike the situation in North America and Asia, where Gastornis is first recorded in the early Eocene, and the largest Paleocene animals were herbivorous mammals. The structure of the Paleocene terrestrial ecosystems of Europe may have been similar to that of some large islands, notably Madagascar, prior to the arrival of humans.
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