Posted Wed, 01/27/2016
The mastodons, ground sloths, and sabercats
are all gone. They all slipped into extinction around 10,000 or so
years ago, along with an even wider variety of fantastic beasts and
birds that fall under the category “megafauna.” But not all the Ice Age
megamammals died out. We spend so much time mourning the losses that we
often forget the survivors that carry whispers of the Pleistocene world.
Among these resilient beasts is the jaguar.
Jaguars are old cats.
They first evolved in Eurasia sometime around three million years ago
before spreading both west and east, eventually inhabiting a range from
southern England to Nebraska and down into South America. Today’s range
of southern Arizona to Argentina—over 3.4 million square miles—is only a
sliver of their Ice Age expansion. And it wasn’t just the jaguar’s
range that shrunk. Today the spotted cats are about fifteen percent
smaller than their Pleistocene predecessors.
Nevertheless, jaguars survived while the American lion, the
sabercats, and other predators vanished. How? In order to investigate
this question, biologist Matt Hayward and colleagues looked at
the jaguar diet and how the cat’s prey preferences changed over time.
Drawing from 25 published studies documenting 3,214 jaguar kills,
Hayward and coauthors found that jaguars are pretty finicky for apex
predators. The big cat’s menu spans 111 species—ranging from cattle to
rodents to monkeys to turtles—but, contrary to what has often been
written about the cat, the jaguar is not really a generalist that hunts
anything and everything.
The most common parts of the jaguar diet, Hayward and colleagues
found, are capybara, wild pig, caiman, collared peccary, nine-banded
armadillo, giant anteater, and white-nosed coati. These species account
for 16-21% of the jaguar diet. The stats also showed that prey including
peccaries, brocket deer, giant anteaters, and coatis which were hunted
85% of the time when they were present in the jaguar’s range. Crunching
the numbers a bit further, the zoologists found that jaguars seemed to
especially target capybara and giant anteater. On the other hand,
jaguars never preyed upon tapirs and almost never touched primates.
Jaguars come out of all this as a paradox. They are burlier than
leopards, yet they prefer to hunt a narrow range of prey that falls in
the shallow end of what jaguars should be able to tackle. This might
have something to do with why the cats have shrunk. Jaguars aren’t large
enough to take on tapirs alone, yet human hunting on mid-range
prey—such as deer—has made such herbivores too rare to rely upon. So
despite their size, jaguars responded by picking out smaller prey which
Hayward and coauthors dub “suboptimal” for what the cats initially
evolved to do.
The jaguar’s not alone in this. Coyotes have gone through similar changes. The scrappy canids are Ice Age survivors,
too, and they were significantly larger during the Ice Age. When all
their competition disappeared, coyotes became smaller and ended up
living on the fringes in a world heavily influenced by humans.
Flexibility made all the difference for these carnivores. Even though
jaguars no longer prowl as much of the world as they once did, and are
currently listed as “near threatened” on the IUCN Red List, they were
able to persist where so many other carnivores perished by shifting
their diets. “It may be that jaguars survived this mass extinction event
by preferentially preying on relatively small species,” Hayward and
coauthors write. The fossil record of cougars tells a similar story:
By eating parts of carcasses other cats didn’t want, mountain lions
were able to survive the tough times. And even though the cause of the
loss of many Ice Age celebrities remains debated, the survivors are
truly the animals we should be looking at in greater detail. How they
succeeded may hold the secrets to why so many other species failed.
Reference:
Hayward, M., Kamler, J., Montgomery, R., Newlove, A., Rostro-GarcĂa, S., Sales, L., Van Valkenburgh, B. 2016. Prey preferences of the jaguar Panthera onca reflect the Post-Pleistocene demise of large prey. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution. doi: 10.3389/fevo.2015.00148
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