Megafauna
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Megafauna are generally defined as animals that weigh over 500 kg to 1 tonne, i.e., any animal larger than the largest widespread domestic animal, the domestic bull. Some authors use much lower thresholds, even as low as 50 kg (making humans a megafauna species), but they are not widely accepted. The term is also used to refer to particular groups of large animals, both to extant species and, more often, those that have become extinct in geologically recent times.
Megafauna animals are generally K-strategists, with great longevity, slow population growth rates, low death rates, and few or no natural predators capable of killing adults. These characteristics make megafauna highly vulnerable to human exploitation. Many species of megafauna have become extinct within the last million years, and, although some biologists dispute it, human hunting is often cited as the cause.
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[edit] Usage
The tense in which the term is used is usually apparent from the context:
- A particular group of large, extinct animals. For example, American megafauna, meaning "the various species of large American mammal that became extinct about 13,000 years ago".
- Any group of large animals. For example, South American megafauna, meaning "all large animals in South America today".
[edit] Extinction
Two major hypotheses have been proposed to explain the extinction of megafauna. The first cites human intervention, noting that the time of human appearances on the various continents was the time that they became extinct. However, this is not widely accepted because megafauna actually began to decline before humans arrived in some places (North America) and did not decline due to human predation (France) in others. There is also a distinct lack of massive kill sites in the archaeological record.
The second is that climate changes, most notably increases in average temperature, caused them to die. While the woolly mammoth survived on at least two islands in the region of the Bering strait for thousands of years after the end of the last glaciation 12,000 years ago, this indicates that it was not just a change in climate and accompanying vegetation that killed off megafauna in other regions, but that the replacement of other species more optimally adapted for the conditions that came with the end of the Pleistocene caused significant population duress.
[edit] Charismatic megafauna
The term charismatic megafauna refers to animals that have widespread popular appeal. Examples include the Giant Panda, the Asian Elephant, and the Blue Whale.
Charismatic megafauna often garner a disproportionate level of public concern. Environmental activists are aware of this effect and use the extra leverage provided by a charismatic species to achieve more subtle and far-reaching goals. By directing public attention to the plight of the Giant Panda, for example, the environmental movement can raise support not just for the protection of the panda, but for the entire ecosystem on which it depends. The Giant Panda is portrayed in the logo of the World Wildlife Fund.
[edit] Megafauna by continent
"†" denotes extinct megafauna
- African megafauna
- African Buffalo
- Common Eland
- Cheetah
- Giant Long-horned Buffalo † (Bubalus antiquus)
- African Bush Elephant
- Leopard
- Gorilla
- Dromedary Camel
- Ground Hornbill
- Ceratosaurus †
- Greater Flamingo
- Kentrosaurus †
- African Forest Elephant
- Hippopotamus
- Black Rhinoceros
- White Rhinoceros
- Giraffe
- Lion
- Nile Crocodile
- Kaluga
- Giant Eland
- Secretary bird
- Wildebeest
- Ostrich
- Zebra
- Teleoceras†
- Uranosaurus †
- Deinotherium †
- Dinofelis †
- Eurasian megafauna
- Aurochs †
- Andrewsarchus †
- Cave Bear †
- Cave lion †
- Giant Panda
- Yak
- Asian Black bear
- Giant ant †
- Deinotherium †
- Dinofelis †
- Entelodont †
- Giant Unicorn †
- Asian Elephant
- Gaur
- Great Blue Heron
- Deinosuchus†
- Iguanodon †
- Indricotherium †
- Irish Elk † (or Irish giant deer)
- Mammoth †
- Kouprey
- Sturgeon
- Mamenchisaurus †
- Megalosaurus †
- Brachiosaurus †
- Most Tiger
- Demoiselle Crane
- Gigantopithecus †
- Orangutan
- Red-crowned Crane
- Komodo Dragon
- Sarus Crane
- Siberian Crane
- Snow Leopard
- Przewalski's Horse
- Indian Rhinoceros
- Javan Rhinoceros
- White Stork
- Sumatran Rhinoceros
- Woolly Rhinoceros †
- Stegodon †
- Syrian Camel †
- Wisent
- Australian megafauna
- Saltwater Crocodile
- Diprotodonts †
- Most Kangaroo
- Goanna
- Emu
- Muttaburrasaurus †
- Brolga
- Cassowary
- Megalania prisca †
- Marsupial lion †
See also: Australian megafauna
- North American megafauna
- Ice Age Camel † (Camelops herternus)
- Alaskan Moose (Alces alces gigas)
- Allosaurus †
- Ankylosaurus †
- American Lion † (Panthera leo atrox)
- American Bison (Bison bison)
- Ancient Bison † (Bison antiquus)
- Apatosaurus †
- American Mammoth † (Mammuthus columbi)
- Equus scotti †
- Giant Beaver † (Castoroides ohioensis)
- Giant Sloth † (Eremotherium rusconii)
- Mastodon †
- Shovel Horn-rhino†
- Diatryma†
- Cougar
- Great Blue Heron
- Gray Wolf
- Giant Canada Geese †
- California Condor
- Coelophysis †
- Tyrannosaurus rex †
- Camarasaurus †
- Giant ant †
- Dire Wolf†
- Montanoceratops †
- Megatherium †
- Saber-toothed cat † (Smilodon fatalis)
- Short-faced Bear † (Arctodus simus)
- Smilodon †
- Stegosaurus †
- Styracosaurus †
- Triceratops †
- Grizzly Bear
- Giant Fox †
- Parasaurolophus †
- Black Bear
- Whooping Crane
- Dinofelis †
- Teratorn † (Teratornis merriami)
- Polar Bear
- Central & South American megafauna
- Glyptodon †
- Carnosaurus†
- Armagasaurus†
- Herrerasaurus†
- Anaconda
- Andean Condor
- Boa Constrictor
- Fer-De-Lance
- Saltasaurus †
- Giant Hummingbird
- Giant Otter
- Titanosaurus†
- Harpy Eagle
- Galapagos Tortoise
- Megatherium †
- Palaeolama mirifica † (an extinct Llama)
- Litoptern †
- Giant Anteater
- Jaguar
- Phorusrhacos†
- Giant Armadillo
- Tapius veroensis † (an extinct Tapir)
- Island megafauna
- Madagascar Elephant bird †
- Moa †
- Moa-nalo †
- Albatross
- Haast's Eagle†
- Japanese Spider crab
- Marine Iguana
- Ocean megafauna
- Most whales
- Walrus
- Sawfish
- Ocean Sunfish
- Elephant Seal
- Steller's Sea Cow †
- Steller's Sea Lion
- Dugong
- Dolphin
- Manatee
- Megalodon †
- Bluefin Tuna
- Marlin
- Octopus
- Great White Shark
- Greenland Shark
- Hammerhead Shark
- Tiger Shark
- Barracuda
- Oarfish
- Manta Ray
- Basking Shark
- Whale Shark
- Giant Squid
- Arctic megafauna
- Domestic megafauna
- Cattle
- Pig
- Sheep
- Horse
- Giant Schnauzer
- Great Dane
- Border Collie
- Newfoundland
- Great Pyrenees
- Italian Maremman Sheepdog
- St. Bernard