Browsing by Author "Scarborough, Matthew Edward"
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- ItemOpen AccessExtreme Body Size Variation in Pleistocene Dwarf Elephants from the Siculo-Maltese Palaeoarchipelago: Disentangling the Causes in Time and Space(2022-03-11) Scarborough, Matthew EdwardThe phenomenon of insular dwarfism in proboscideans is particularly well represented on the Siculo-Maltese Palaeoarchipelago, an island group on which a species complex of palaeoloxodont elephants evolved during the Middle-Late Pleistocene. This likely included three species from Malta, four from Sicily (and possibly its palaeo-islands), and one from Favignana Island, ranging in size from the 1 m-tall Palaeoloxodon falconeri to continental-sized 4m-tall P. antiquus. However, our understanding of the causes for extreme differences in body size among insular samples in such a small geographic region is still limited. Here, I document the full range in size of elephants from the palaeoarchipelago, and discuss the reasons for size differences on the three islands in time and space in relation to predation, competition, resource limitation, accelerated life history, and duration of isolation. Differences in size between larger and smaller Sicilian elephants from Luparello Fissure, as well as possibly also in P. ex gr. P. mnaidriensis from Puntali Cave, San Teodoro Cave, and Favignana Island, may relate to the duration of isolation, or alternatively environmental stressors associated with the Last Glacial Maximum in the case of the Favignana elephant. Additionally, small but significant differences in size observable in Middle Pleistocene P. ex gr. P. falconeri from different localities on Sicily, as well as in Maltese P. ‘melitensis’ may also relate to duration of isolation, highlighting the need for better geochronological data in order to better distinguish macro-ecological causes driving body size change from more subtle effects relating to duration of isolation.
- ItemOpen AccessInsular adaptations in the appendicular skeleton of Sicilian and Maltese dwarf elephants(2020) Scarborough, Matthew Edward; Chinsamy-Turan, Anusuya; Palombo, Maria RitaThis thesis investigates the evolution of Pleistocene insular proboscideans from the centralwestern Mediterranean (Palaeoloxodon species from Sicily, Malta, Favignana) and a mammoth (Mammuthus lamarmorai) from Sardinia, with a particular emphasis on the anatomy of the limbs. Differences in the morphology of the limbs are examined across a tenfold reduction in mass (from 3,5m-tall P. antiquus from Germany to 1,2 m-tall P. ex gr. P. falconeri from Spinagallo Cave, Sicily), revealing insights into significant morphological changes in the long and foot-bones, particularly appendicular changes evident in SiculoMaltese P. ex gr. P. falconeri. Notable morphological differences between P. antiquus and its insular descendent P. ex gr. P. falconeri include the functional morphology of the ankle-joint (especially the calcaneus' articular facet for the tibia). Furthermore, morphological similarities found between the femur of young continental elephants (P. antiquus and L. africana) and adult insular dwarfs (P. ex gr. P. falconeri and its probable ancestor Palaeoloxodon sp. from Lparello Fissure, Sicily) suggest evidence of paedomorphism in the limbs. Similarly, comparisons of the ontogenetic allometry of the tibia in L. africana and P. ex gr. P. falconceri include changes which are also consistent with paedomorphism, although other factors could not be ruled out. In the humerus large differences are evident in the morphology of the deltoid tubercule between co-generic insular Palaeoloxodon species, suggesting interspecific differences in the musculo-skeletal system. Furthermore, on the basis of dimensions, morphology and stratigraphy, the large Palaeoloxodon sp. remains from Luparello Fissure, north-western Sicily are suggested to belong to the ancestral chronospecies of P. ex gr. P. falconeri from Sicily, which may have subsequently colonized Malta during the reduced sea-levels of a Middle Pleistocene glacial lowstand (following a corridor with reduced distances between the two islands). Additionally, morphological differences in the calcanei of elephants from Luparello Fissure, Sicily, and Benghisa Gap, Malta may be the result of allopatric speciation between similar-sized elephants during the Middle Pleistocene, or alternatively relate to ecomorphology. These findings suggest that the morphology of the calcaneus may be more informative than hitherto recognised for resolving systematics and taxonomy among the Elephantini. Furthermore, although the absolute chronology of SiculoMaltese elephants remains poorly constrained, preliminary U-Th dating at Alcamo Quarry, western Sicily suggests a tentative early Middle Pleistocene age for Palaeoloxodon sp.