白令
气候变化
更新世
地理
陆桥
栖息地
人口
野生动物
生态学
考古
生物
生物扩散
人口学
社会学
作者
Yvette Running Horse Collin,Clément P. Bataille,Samantha N. Hershauer,Mila Hunska Tašunke Icu,Akil Nujipi,Wilson Justin,Jane Stelkia,James Aaron Stelkia,Sean Asikłuk Topkok,Beth Leonard,Beatle Soop,Mario González,Anpetu Luta Wiƞ,Wakiƞyala Wiƞ,Tanka Omniya,Barbara Dull Knife,Bill Means,Cruz Tecumseh Collin,Michael Koskey,Joshua D. Kapp
出处
期刊:Science
[American Association for the Advancement of Science]
日期:2025-05-15
卷期号:388 (6748): 748-755
标识
DOI:10.1126/science.adr2355
摘要
Climate affects habitat, food availability, and the movement and sustainability of all life. In this work, we apply Indigenous and Western scientific methods, including genomics and isotope profiling, on fossils from across Beringia to explore the effect of climate change on horses. We find that Late Pleistocene horses from Alaska and northern Yukon are related to populations from Eurasia and crossed the Bering land bridge multiple times during the last glacial interval. We also find deeply divergent lineages north and south of the American ice sheets that genetically influenced populations across Beringia and into Eurasia. As climate warmed and horses entered the ice-free corridor connecting Beringia and midcontinental America, restricted mobility and food availability impeded population growth. Our combined Western and Indigenous framework offers critical guidance for wildlife conservation amid ongoing climate change.
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