Highlights:
• First zircon dates from Neogene classic sites in central Argentina are provided.
• An increase of C4 plants values is recorded in mammal diets from Early Pliocene.
• The δ13C values of Lycopsis and Thylacosmilus suggest prey partitioning.
Abstract
The analysis of stable isotopes in fossil mammals is useful for reconstructing paleoenvironmental and paleoecological conditions, but has been rarely applied to the Neogene of South America. In this study, we perform an integrative analysis (including U–Pb zircon dates and mammalian stable isotopes data) for the Late Miocene–Early Pliocene of central Argentina. We provide radioisotopic ages for some classic fossiliferous localities in this region, including an age of 9.7 ± 0.3 Ma for Arroyo Chasicó and 4.5 ± 0.2 Ma for Farola Monte Hermoso, and address the interval covering the Chasicoan (Late Miocene), Huayquerian (Late Miocene–Early Pliocene), and Montehermosan (Early Pliocene) stages/ages. In the Chasicoan Stage/Age, taxa with mixed C3–C4 diets are recorded, suggesting the existence of favorable conditions for the C4 photosynthetic pathway before its full expansion. However, taxa represented across most of the Huayquerian Stage/Age show a preference for C3–based diets, which changes in the latest Huayquerian–Montehermosan stages/ages when an increase in the percentage of C4 plants in the diet of notoungulates, rodents, and xenarthrans is recorded, coinciding with the global expansion of C4 plants. For the first time, the dietary behavior of two South American endemic sparassodont metatherians (Lycopsis and Thylacosmilus) has been evaluated from using stable isotope; analysis of these hypercarnivores show differences in δ13C values, suggesting prey partitioning, partly due to the difference in body size. The fossiliferous sites studied, and the new isotopic and chronological information obtained, provide more detailed paleoecological and paleoenvironmental contexts for the Argentine Pampas during the last stages of the isolation of South America and the first pulses of the Great Biotic American Interchange. In addition, the new ages allow to better adjust the arrival of the first Holarctic immigrants in the region.
Keywords: Carbon, Oxygen, Radiometric dating, Miocene, Pliocene, South America
Dánae Sanz-Pérez, Claudia I. Montalvo, Adriana E. Mehl, Rodrigo L. Tomassini, Manuel Hernández Fernández and Laura Domingo. 2024. Paleoenvironment and paleoecology associated with the early phases of the Great American Biotic Interchange based on stable isotope analysis of fossil mammals and new U–Pb ages from the Pampas of Argentina. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 634, 111917. DOI: 10.1016/j.palaeo.2023.111917