A 2200-year record of Andean Condor diet and nest site usage reflects natural and anthropogenic stressors

Understanding how animals respond to large-scale environmental changes is difficult to achieve because monitoring data are rarely available for more than the past few decades, if at all. Here, we demonstrate how a variety of palaeoecological proxies (e.g. isotopes, geochemistry and DNA) from an Ande...

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Published in:Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences Vol. 290; no. 1998; p. 20230106
Main Authors: Duda, Matthew P, Grooms, Christopher, Sympson, Lorenzo, Blais, Jules M, Dagodzo, Daniel, Feng, Wenxi, Hayward, Kristen M, Julius, Matthew L, Kimpe, Linda E, Lambertucci, Sergio A, Layton-Matthews, Daniel, Lougheed, Stephen C, Massaferro, Julieta, Michelutti, Neal, Pufahl, Peir K, Vuletich, April, Smol, John P
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England The Royal Society 10-05-2023
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Summary:Understanding how animals respond to large-scale environmental changes is difficult to achieve because monitoring data are rarely available for more than the past few decades, if at all. Here, we demonstrate how a variety of palaeoecological proxies (e.g. isotopes, geochemistry and DNA) from an Andean Condor ( ) guano deposit from Argentina can be used to explore breeding site fidelity and the impacts of environmental changes on avian behaviour. We found that condors used the nesting site since at least approximately 2200 years ago, with an approximately 1000-year nesting frequency slowdown from 1650 to 650 years before the present (yr BP). We provide evidence that the nesting slowdown coincided with a period of increased volcanic activity in the nearby Southern Volcanic Zone, which resulted in decreased availability of carrion and deterred scavenging birds. After returning to the nest site 650 yr BP, condor diet shifted from the carrion of native species and beached marine animals to the carrion of livestock (e.g. sheep and cattle) and exotic herbivores (e.g. red deer and European hare) introduced by European settlers. Currently, Andean Condors have elevated lead concentrations in their guano compared to the past, which is associated with human persecution linked to the shift in diet.
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Electronic supplementary material is available online at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.6602681.
ISSN:0962-8452
1471-2954
DOI:10.1098/rspb.2023.0106