Neither fish nor fowl. Isotopic evidence of a plant-based diet in (captive?) brown bears from Roman Augusta Raurica, Switzerland

In Roman times, the brown bear (Ursus arctos Linnaeus, 1758) was one of the most important hunted wild animal species. Bears were killed for e.g. their furs, their teeth and their meat. One of the reasons for catching bears alive was for their use in the context of public entertainment, i.e., animal...

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Published in:Anthropozoologica
Main Author: Gerling, Claudia
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Association l'Homme et l'Animal 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://edoc.unibas.ch/94977/
https://doi.org/10.5252/anthropozoologica2023v58a5
id ftunivbasel:oai:edoc.unibas.ch:94977
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivbasel:oai:edoc.unibas.ch:94977 2023-07-23T04:22:08+02:00 Neither fish nor fowl. Isotopic evidence of a plant-based diet in (captive?) brown bears from Roman Augusta Raurica, Switzerland Gerling, Claudia 2023 https://edoc.unibas.ch/94977/ https://doi.org/10.5252/anthropozoologica2023v58a5 unknown Association l'Homme et l'Animal Gerling, Claudia. (2023) Neither fish nor fowl. Isotopic evidence of a plant-based diet in (captive?) brown bears from Roman Augusta Raurica, Switzerland. Anthropozoologica, 58 (5). pp. 59-72. doi:10.5252/anthropozoologica2023v58a5 urn:ISSN:0761-3032 info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess Article PeerReviewed 2023 ftunivbasel https://doi.org/10.5252/anthropozoologica2023v58a5 2023-07-02T23:45:43Z In Roman times, the brown bear (Ursus arctos Linnaeus, 1758) was one of the most important hunted wild animal species. Bears were killed for e.g. their furs, their teeth and their meat. One of the reasons for catching bears alive was for their use in the context of public entertainment, i.e., animal hunts in amphitheatres. Bear bones from the Roman settlement of Augusta Raurica, NW Switzerland, attest the tradition of hunting (or trading?) bears in this part of the Roman Empire. Archaeozoological investigations of several complete bear skeletons from this site indicated that at least one bear was kept in captivity for some period. The remains of four bears, deposited in two wells, were selected for stable carbon and nitrogen isotope analysis to explore whether life (stages) in captivity had an impact on the diets and in consequence to the stable isotope ratios in bear bone collagen. A comparison with (herbivorous) horses and (omni-)carnivorous dogs from the same Roman city and with bears from other prehistoric and modern contexts indicates that the diet of the adult brown bear specimen from Augusta Raurica was plant-based and does not provide evidence of human-influenced feeding in (prolonged) captivity. Nitrogen enrichment in the young bears is most likely explained by suckling. Human-influenced additional feeding in captivity cannot be completely ruled out but the enrichment results from stable isotope data from wild brown bear data from the literature and from dogs and equids from the same site argue suggest that this was not taking place. Article in Journal/Newspaper Ursus arctos University of Basel: edoc Augusta ENVELOPE(163.100,163.100,-84.800,-84.800) Omni ENVELOPE(144.232,144.232,59.863,59.863) Anthropozoologica 58 5
institution Open Polar
collection University of Basel: edoc
op_collection_id ftunivbasel
language unknown
description In Roman times, the brown bear (Ursus arctos Linnaeus, 1758) was one of the most important hunted wild animal species. Bears were killed for e.g. their furs, their teeth and their meat. One of the reasons for catching bears alive was for their use in the context of public entertainment, i.e., animal hunts in amphitheatres. Bear bones from the Roman settlement of Augusta Raurica, NW Switzerland, attest the tradition of hunting (or trading?) bears in this part of the Roman Empire. Archaeozoological investigations of several complete bear skeletons from this site indicated that at least one bear was kept in captivity for some period. The remains of four bears, deposited in two wells, were selected for stable carbon and nitrogen isotope analysis to explore whether life (stages) in captivity had an impact on the diets and in consequence to the stable isotope ratios in bear bone collagen. A comparison with (herbivorous) horses and (omni-)carnivorous dogs from the same Roman city and with bears from other prehistoric and modern contexts indicates that the diet of the adult brown bear specimen from Augusta Raurica was plant-based and does not provide evidence of human-influenced feeding in (prolonged) captivity. Nitrogen enrichment in the young bears is most likely explained by suckling. Human-influenced additional feeding in captivity cannot be completely ruled out but the enrichment results from stable isotope data from wild brown bear data from the literature and from dogs and equids from the same site argue suggest that this was not taking place.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Gerling, Claudia
spellingShingle Gerling, Claudia
Neither fish nor fowl. Isotopic evidence of a plant-based diet in (captive?) brown bears from Roman Augusta Raurica, Switzerland
author_facet Gerling, Claudia
author_sort Gerling, Claudia
title Neither fish nor fowl. Isotopic evidence of a plant-based diet in (captive?) brown bears from Roman Augusta Raurica, Switzerland
title_short Neither fish nor fowl. Isotopic evidence of a plant-based diet in (captive?) brown bears from Roman Augusta Raurica, Switzerland
title_full Neither fish nor fowl. Isotopic evidence of a plant-based diet in (captive?) brown bears from Roman Augusta Raurica, Switzerland
title_fullStr Neither fish nor fowl. Isotopic evidence of a plant-based diet in (captive?) brown bears from Roman Augusta Raurica, Switzerland
title_full_unstemmed Neither fish nor fowl. Isotopic evidence of a plant-based diet in (captive?) brown bears from Roman Augusta Raurica, Switzerland
title_sort neither fish nor fowl. isotopic evidence of a plant-based diet in (captive?) brown bears from roman augusta raurica, switzerland
publisher Association l'Homme et l'Animal
publishDate 2023
url https://edoc.unibas.ch/94977/
https://doi.org/10.5252/anthropozoologica2023v58a5
long_lat ENVELOPE(163.100,163.100,-84.800,-84.800)
ENVELOPE(144.232,144.232,59.863,59.863)
geographic Augusta
Omni
geographic_facet Augusta
Omni
genre Ursus arctos
genre_facet Ursus arctos
op_relation Gerling, Claudia. (2023) Neither fish nor fowl. Isotopic evidence of a plant-based diet in (captive?) brown bears from Roman Augusta Raurica, Switzerland. Anthropozoologica, 58 (5). pp. 59-72.
doi:10.5252/anthropozoologica2023v58a5
urn:ISSN:0761-3032
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5252/anthropozoologica2023v58a5
container_title Anthropozoologica
container_volume 58
container_issue 5
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