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Red Panda feces from Eastern Himalaya as a modern analogue for palaeodietary and palaeoecological analyses.


ABSTRACT: Modern feces samples of the endangered red panda (Ailurus fulgens) were examined using multiproxy analysis to characterize the dietary patterns in their natural habitat in India. An abundance of Bambusoideae phytoliths and leaves (macrobotanical remains) provide direct evidence of their primary dietary plants. In contrast, Bambusoideae pollen is sporadic or absent in the pollen assemblages. An abundance of Lepisorus spores and its leaves along with broadleaved taxa, Betula, Engelhardtia, and Quercus are indicative of other important food sources. Average δ13C values (- 29.6‰) of the red panda feces indicate typical C3 type of plants as the primary food source, while the, δ15N values vary in narrow range (3.3-5.1‰) but conspicuously reveal a seasonal difference in values most likely due to differing metabolic activities in summer and winter. The multiproxy data can provide a baseline for the reconstruction of the palaeodietary and palaeoecology of extinct herbivores at both regional and global scales.

SUBMITTER: Basumatary SK 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC8443643 | biostudies-literature | 2021 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Red Panda feces from Eastern Himalaya as a modern analogue for palaeodietary and palaeoecological analyses.

Basumatary Sadhan K SK   Gogoi Rajib R   Tripathi Swati S   Ghosh Ruby R   Pokharia Anil K AK   McDonald H Gregory HG   Sherpa Norbu N   van Asperen Eline N EN   Agnihotri Rajesh R   Chhetri Geetamani G   Saikia Korobi K   Pandey Arya A  

Scientific reports 20210915 1


Modern feces samples of the endangered red panda (Ailurus fulgens) were examined using multiproxy analysis to characterize the dietary patterns in their natural habitat in India. An abundance of Bambusoideae phytoliths and leaves (macrobotanical remains) provide direct evidence of their primary dietary plants. In contrast, Bambusoideae pollen is sporadic or absent in the pollen assemblages. An abundance of Lepisorus spores and its leaves along with broadleaved taxa, Betula, Engelhardtia, and Que  ...[more]

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