Age-graded fossils of Pleistocene endemic Cretan deer (Candiacervus spp.) reveal unexpectedly high juvenile mortality similar to that reported for extant mainland ruminants, despite the fact that these deer lived in a predator-free environment and became extinct before any plausible date for human arrival. Age profiles show that deer surviving past the fawn stage were relatively long-lived for ruminants, indicating that high juvenile mortality was not an expression of their living a “fast” life. Although the effects on survivorship of such variables as fatal accidents, starvation, and disease are difficult to gauge in extinct taxa, the presence of extreme morphological variability within nominal species/ecomorphs of Candiacervus is consistent with the view that high juvenile mortality can function as a key innovation permitting rapid adaptation in insular contexts.
ΘΑΛΗΣ- Ενίσχυση της Διεπιστημανικής ή και Διιδρυματικής έρευνας και καινοτομίας με δυνατότητα προσέλκυσης ερευνητών υψηλού επιπέδου από το εξωτερικό μέσω της διενέργειας βασικής και εφαρμοσμένης έρευνας αριστείας. ΘΑΛΗΣ-ΕΚΠΑ-«Νησιωτική βιοποικιλότητα και πολιτισμική εξέλιξη: παραδείγματα από την Ανατολική Μεσόγειο, Μαδαγασκάρη, Μαυρίκιος, Φιλιππίνες κατά τα τελευταία 800.000 χρόνια»