生物
营养水平
古生物学
进化生物学
生态学
动物
作者
Andrés Link,Jorge W. Moreno-Bernal,Federico J. Degrange,Siobhán B. Cooke,Luis Gonzalo Ortiz-Pabon,Cesar Augusto Perdomo-Rojas,Rodolfo Salas‐Gismondi
标识
DOI:10.1098/rsbl.2025.0113
摘要
Direct evidence of predation and other trophic relationships provide valuable information about trophic interactions between species in palaeo-communities. Data on ecological interactions amongst extant apex predators open a unique opportunity to better understand how sympatric apex predators coexisted or interacted with each other in the past. Here, we describe direct evidence of a predation or scavenging event in which we hypothesize that a medium-sized caiman (possibly Purussaurus neivensis ) consumed (either through scavenging or through direct predation) a large terror bird. The distal part of a left tibiotarsus from a phorusrhacid had four pits inflicted on the cortical bone, and no signs of healing, suggesting it did not survive this trophic event. This record contributes to our current understanding of prey consumed by P. neivensis in the wetlands of the Pebas System of South America and indicates that large phorusrhacids might have had higher predation risk than previously expected. This study provides evidence of a trophic relation between apex predators and the complexity of trophic interactions in the diverse vertebrate palaeo-community of La Venta in the Middle Miocene of northern South America.
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