Neo-taphonomic analysis of the Misiam leopard lair from Olduvai Gorge (Tanzania): understanding leopard–hyena interactions in open settings

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Domínguez Rodrigo, Manuel and Organista, Elia and Baquedano, Enrique and Cifuentes Alcobendas, Gabriel and Pizarro Monzo, Marcos and Vegara Riquelme, Marina and Gidna, Agnes and Uribelarrea del Val, David and Martín Perea, David (2022) Neo-taphonomic analysis of the Misiam leopard lair from Olduvai Gorge (Tanzania): understanding leopard–hyena interactions in open settings. Royal Society Open Science, 9 (220252). ISSN ESSN: 2054-5703

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.220252



Abstract

Misiam is a modern wildebeest-dominated accumulation situated in a steep ravine covered with dense vegetation at Olduvai Gorge (Tanzania). It is interpreted here as a leopard lair to which carcasses have been transported for several years. Felid-specific bone damage patterns, felid-typical skeletal part profiles, taxonomic specialization and the physical presence of leopards observed by the authors show that leopards at Misiam can be specialized medium-sized carcass accumulators. Hyenas also intervened at intervals in the modification of the retrieved faunal assemblage. This makes Misiam a carnivore palimpsest. Here, we additionally show that leopards only transport and accumulate carcasses on occasions, that they can seem highly specialized despite being dietary generalists, and that such a behaviour may be prompted by seasonal competition or during the breeding season or both. Misiam is the first open-air leopard lair with a dense bone accumulation reported. There, leopards engaged in intensive accumulation of carcasses during the wet season, when the southern Serengeti short-grass plains undergo the effect of the famous wildebeest migration and this migratory species reaches the gorge. The ecological importance of this behaviour and its relevance as a proxy for reconstructing prehistoric carnivore behaviours are discussed.


Item Type:Article
Uncontrolled Keywords:leopard, Olduvai Gorge (Tanzania), hyena, taphonomy, ethology
Subjects:Sciences > Geology > Paleontology
ID Code:75028
Deposited On:10 Oct 2022 16:14
Last Modified:11 Oct 2022 07:04

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