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Dietary reconstruction of Miocene Gomphotherium (Mammalia, Proboscidea) from the Great Plains region, USA, based on the carbon isotope composition of tusk and molar enamel
The Miocene of the Great Plains of North America has long been recognized as an interval of major ecological reorganization. To reconstruct the dietary response of the proboscidean
Gomphotherium to Miocene ecosystem change in the Great Plains, we analyzed the carbon isotope composition of 185 serial samples of tusk enamel from 17 individuals and bulk samples of posterior molars from 15 individuals of
Gomphotherium from localities in the Great Plains ranging in age from the Early Barstovian land mammal age (ca. 15 Ma) to the Early Hemphillian land mammal age (ca. 8 Ma). Sets of samples from each tusk were designed to encompass about 1 year of tusk growth. Based on cheek tooth morphology,
Gomphotherium is thought to be a browser with a diet primarily of dicots. The mean
δ
13C of all samples is −9.8±1.2‰, indicating that the diet of
Gomphotherium was dominated by C
3 biomass. If
Gomphotherium habitually foraged on water-stressed plants in arid habitats, which would have
δ
13C values higher than the average composition for C
3 and C
4 plants, then all but one individual in this study consumed less than 50% C
4 biomass. The maximum percentage of C
4 in the diet would be much lower if food plants had average
δ
13C values or if
Gomphotherium foraged in closed-canopy habitats. Differences in
δ
13C values between specimens from the southwestern US and the Great Plains, as well as between some coeval specimens from Nebraska, suggest geographic differences in either diet or typical foraging habitat. The data do not indicate a trend toward inclusion of more C
4 vegetation in the diet of
Gomphotherium during the Miocene, and none of the serially sampled tusks exhibit seasonally varying
δ
13C profiles. For most of its history in North America,
Gomphotherium was a C
3 browser or a mixed feeder with a preference for browse. Our results indicate that areas of wooded habitat sufficient to support herds of large-bodied herbivores remained available in the Great Plains through the Late Miocene.