Woodcutting behavior in beavers (Castoridae, Rodentia): Estimating ecological performance in a modern and a fossil taxon

An early Pliocene fossil locality in the Canadian High Arctic preserves the remains of the extinct beaver Dipoides sp. (Castoridae, Rodentia) in association with an assemblage of fossil beaver-cut wood. The wood assemblage presents a first opportunity to investigate woodcutting behavior and ecologic...

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Published in:Paleobiology
Main Author: Rybczynski, N. (Natalia)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.library.carleton.ca/pub/23167
https://doi.org/10.1666/06085.1
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spelling ftcarletonunivir:oai:carleton.ca:23167 2023-05-15T15:05:12+02:00 Woodcutting behavior in beavers (Castoridae, Rodentia): Estimating ecological performance in a modern and a fossil taxon Rybczynski, N. (Natalia) 2008-06-01 https://ir.library.carleton.ca/pub/23167 https://doi.org/10.1666/06085.1 en eng https://ir.library.carleton.ca/pub/23167 doi:10.1666/06085.1 Paleobiology vol. 34 no. 3, pp. 389-402 info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2008 ftcarletonunivir https://doi.org/10.1666/06085.1 2022-02-06T21:50:13Z An early Pliocene fossil locality in the Canadian High Arctic preserves the remains of the extinct beaver Dipoides sp. (Castoridae, Rodentia) in association with an assemblage of fossil beaver-cut wood. The wood assemblage presents a first opportunity to investigate woodcutting behavior and ecological performance in an extinct castorid genus. This study compares woodcutting in Dipoides sp. with that of the modern beaver, Castor canadensis, using evidence from small-diameter cut sticks (i.e., sticks transected by parallel series of cut marks) in combination with behavioral observations of Castor woodcutting. During woodcutting both Castor and Dipoides used their incisors unilaterally; the upper incisor was pressed against the stick while the corresponding lower incisor cut. Cut marks were relatively larger for Castor than Dipoides (scaled to incisor size). Compared with Dipoides, Castor more frequently used a cutting strategy that minimized the number of cuts needed to transect a stick (e.g., clipping as opposed to chip removal). Taken together, the behavioral evidence suggests that ecological cutting performance was lower for Dipoides than Castor. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Carleton University's Institutional Repository Arctic Paleobiology 34 3 389 402
institution Open Polar
collection Carleton University's Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftcarletonunivir
language English
description An early Pliocene fossil locality in the Canadian High Arctic preserves the remains of the extinct beaver Dipoides sp. (Castoridae, Rodentia) in association with an assemblage of fossil beaver-cut wood. The wood assemblage presents a first opportunity to investigate woodcutting behavior and ecological performance in an extinct castorid genus. This study compares woodcutting in Dipoides sp. with that of the modern beaver, Castor canadensis, using evidence from small-diameter cut sticks (i.e., sticks transected by parallel series of cut marks) in combination with behavioral observations of Castor woodcutting. During woodcutting both Castor and Dipoides used their incisors unilaterally; the upper incisor was pressed against the stick while the corresponding lower incisor cut. Cut marks were relatively larger for Castor than Dipoides (scaled to incisor size). Compared with Dipoides, Castor more frequently used a cutting strategy that minimized the number of cuts needed to transect a stick (e.g., clipping as opposed to chip removal). Taken together, the behavioral evidence suggests that ecological cutting performance was lower for Dipoides than Castor.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Rybczynski, N. (Natalia)
spellingShingle Rybczynski, N. (Natalia)
Woodcutting behavior in beavers (Castoridae, Rodentia): Estimating ecological performance in a modern and a fossil taxon
author_facet Rybczynski, N. (Natalia)
author_sort Rybczynski, N. (Natalia)
title Woodcutting behavior in beavers (Castoridae, Rodentia): Estimating ecological performance in a modern and a fossil taxon
title_short Woodcutting behavior in beavers (Castoridae, Rodentia): Estimating ecological performance in a modern and a fossil taxon
title_full Woodcutting behavior in beavers (Castoridae, Rodentia): Estimating ecological performance in a modern and a fossil taxon
title_fullStr Woodcutting behavior in beavers (Castoridae, Rodentia): Estimating ecological performance in a modern and a fossil taxon
title_full_unstemmed Woodcutting behavior in beavers (Castoridae, Rodentia): Estimating ecological performance in a modern and a fossil taxon
title_sort woodcutting behavior in beavers (castoridae, rodentia): estimating ecological performance in a modern and a fossil taxon
publishDate 2008
url https://ir.library.carleton.ca/pub/23167
https://doi.org/10.1666/06085.1
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source Paleobiology vol. 34 no. 3, pp. 389-402
op_relation https://ir.library.carleton.ca/pub/23167
doi:10.1666/06085.1
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1666/06085.1
container_title Paleobiology
container_volume 34
container_issue 3
container_start_page 389
op_container_end_page 402
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