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A Lost Link between a Flightless Parrot and a Parasitic Plant and the Potential Role of Coprolites in Conservation Paleobiology
Authors:Jamie R Wood  Janet M Wilmshurst  Trevor H Worthy  Avi S Holzapfel  Alan Cooper
Institution:1. Landcare Research, , P.O. Box 40 Lincoln, Canterbury 7640, New Zealand;2. School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of New South Wales, , Sydney, 2052 Australia;3. Department of Conservation, , Hamilton, 3240 New Zealand;4. Australian Centre for Ancient DNA, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Adelaide, , South Australia, 5005 Australia
Abstract:Late Quaternary extinctions and population fragmentations have severely disrupted animal‐plant interactions globally. Detection of disrupted interactions often relies on anachronistic plant characteristics, such as spines in the absence of large herbivores or large fruit without dispersers. However, obvious anachronisms are relatively uncommon, and it can be difficult to prove a direct link between the anachronism and a particular faunal taxon. Analysis of coprolites (fossil feces) provides a novel way of exposing lost interactions between animals (depositors) and consumed organisms. We analyzed ancient DNA to show that a coprolite from the South Island of New Zealand was deposited by the rare and threatened kakapo (Strigops habroptilus), a large, nocturnal, flightless parrot. When we analyzed the pollen and spore content of the coprolite, we found pollen from the cryptic root‐parasite Dactylanthus taylorii. The relatively high abundance (8.9% of total pollen and spores) of this zoophilous pollen type in the coprolite supports the hypothesis of a former direct feeding interaction between kakapo and D. taylorii. The ranges of both species have contracted substantially since human settlement, and their present distributions no longer overlap. Currently, the lesser short‐tailed bat (Mystacina tuberculata) is the only known native pollinator of D. taylorii, but our finding raises the possibility that birds, and other small fauna, could have once fed on and pollinated the plant. If confirmed, through experimental work and observations, this finding may inform conservation of the plant. For example, it may be possible to translocate D. taylorii to predator‐free offshore islands that lack bats but have thriving populations of endemic nectar‐feeding birds. The study of coprolites of rare or extinct taxonomic groups provides a unique way forward to expand existing knowledge of lost plant and animal interactions and to identify pollination and dispersal syndromes. This approach of linking paleobiology with neoecology offers significant untapped potential to help inform conservation and restoration plans. Un Eslabón Perdido entre un Loro No Volador y una Planta Parásita y el Papel Potencial de Coprolitos en Paleobiología de la Conservación
Keywords:Dactylanthus taylorii  ecological interactions  herbivory  kakapo  New Zealand  pollination  Strigops habroptilus  Dactylanthus taylorii  herbivorí  a  interacciones ecoló  gicas  kakapo  Nueva Zelanda  polinizació  n  Strigops habroptilus
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