@article{98c595475ef444cab9bdcbbfd22fb8e6,
title = "Fossils reject climate change as the cause of extinction of Caribbean bats",
abstract = "We combined novel radiocarbon dates of bat fossils with time-scaled ecological niche models (ENM) to study bat extinctions in the Caribbean. Radiocarbon-dated fossils show that late Quaternary losses of bat populations took place during the late Holocene (<4 €...ka) rather than late Pleistocene (>10 €...ka). All bat radiocarbon dates from Abaco (Bahamas) that represent extirpated populations are younger than 4 €...ka. We include data on six bat species, three of which are Caribbean endemics, and include nectarivores as well as insectivores. Climate-based ENMs from the Last Glacial Maximum to the present reflect overall stability in distributions, with suitable climatic habitat being present over time. In the absence of radiocarbon dates, bat extinctions had been presumed to take place during the last glacial-interglacial transition (ca. 10 €...ka). Now we see that extirpation of bats on these tropical islands is more complex than previously thought and primarily postdates the major climate changes that took place during the late Pleistocene-Holocene transition.",
author = "Soto-Centeno, {J. Angel} and Steadman, {David W.}",
note = "Funding Information: We appreciate the strong foundation for the paleontology of Caribbean bats developed through the years by Gary Morgan and the late Karl Koopman. For their efforts in the field or laboratory, we also thank Nancy Albury, Kenny Broad, Daniel Cordier, Kelly Delancy, Janet Franklin, Richard Franz, Richard Hulbert, Brian Kakuk, Jim Mead, Gary Morgan, Hayley Singleton, and Charles Woods. This research was supported by the National Science Foundation (grant BCS-1118369 to DWS), National Geographic Society (grant EC0372-08), and the UF Ornithology Endowment. Part of this research was also funded by AMNH Theodore Roosevelt Postdoctoral Fellowship and a Gerstner Scholarship to JAS-C. Research permits and other important logistical assistance were kindly provided by The Bahamas National Trust (Eric Carey, Markus Davis, Lynn Gape, David Knowles), Abaco Friends of the Environment (Michael Albury, Ruth Albury, Olivia Patterson, Kristin Williams), The National Museum of The Bahamas (Antiquities, Monuments and Museums Corporation) (Nancy Albury, Kelly Delancy, Michael Pateman, Keith Tinker), and Bahamas Caves Research Foundation (Brian Kakuk). JAS-C thanks Aja Marcato and Ron Barrilito for additional logistic support and stimulating conversations about extinctions. We are especially grateful to Brian Kakuk and Nancy Albury for doing or coordinating the scuba diving to collect fossils in flooded caves. For comments that improved the manuscript, we thank Susan Cameron Devitt, Janet Franklin, Jessica Oswald, and David Reed.",
year = "2015",
doi = "10.1038/srep07971",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "5",
journal = "Scientific reports",
issn = "2045-2322",
publisher = "Nature Publishing Group",
}