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How Bear Dogs and Saber-Toothed Tigers Coexisted

Wednesday, November 7, 2012 22:22
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Illustration depicting how the region of Cerro de los Batallones in central Spain likely looked 9 million years ago. Researchers led by the University of Michigan have used carbon records in the teeth of fossilized predators to shed light on how saber-toothed cats and bear dogs shared space and prey during the late Miocene period. (Mauricio Antón)

Illustration depicting how the region of Cerro de los Batallones in central Spain likely looked 9 million years ago. Researchers led by the University of Michigan have used carbon records in the teeth of fossilized predators to shed light on how saber-toothed cats and bear dogs shared space and prey during the late Miocene period. (Mauricio Antón)

Paleontologists are using extinct predators’ fossilized fangs to understand how they shared their habitat during the late Miocene Period.

A Spanish-U.S. research team compared the tooth enamel of three species that inhabited a wooded area with grassland patches: two cats—the leopard-sized Promegantereon ogygia and lion-sized Machairodus aphanistus—and the bear dog, which had a bear-like body but teeth like a dog.

“These three animals were sympatric—they inhabited the same geographic area at the same time,” said study first author Soledad Domingo at the University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology in a press release.

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“What they did to coexist was to avoid each other and partition the resources.”

The researchers compared the ratio of carbon-12 and -13 isotopes in the fangs, which originate from plants eaten by herbivores and passed through the food chain to carnivores.

“This would be the same in your tooth enamel today,” Domingo explained. “If we sampled them, we could have an idea of what you eat. It’s a signature that remains through time.”

Both cats ate horses and wild boar, but the smaller ones may have used tree cover to avoid the larger ones, while the bear dog hunted antelope in a more open area.

“The three largest mammalian predators captured prey in different portions of the habitat, as do coexisting large predators today,” said study co-author Catherine Badgley in the release.

 

“So even though none of the species in this 9-million-year-old ecosystem are still alive today (some of their descendants are), we found evidence for similar ecological interactions as in modern ecosystems.”

The study was published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B on Nov. 7.

The Epoch Times publishes in 35 countries and in 19 languages. Subscribe to our e-newsletter.

 

Republished with permission from The Epoch Times.

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