Y. Wang et al., FOSSIL HORSES AND CARBON ISOTOPES - NEW EVIDENCE FOR CENOZOIC DIETARY, HABITAT, AND ECOSYSTEM CHANGES IN NORTH-AMERICA, Palaeogeography, palaeoclimatology, palaeoecology, 107(3-4), 1994, pp. 269-279
The transformation from low-crowned to high-crowned horse teeth during
the Miocene has traditionally been interpreted as an adaptive respons
e to the spread of savanna grasslands during the middle Miocene by abo
ut 15 m.y. ago. Carbon isotope data from 50 North American horse teeth
spanning Eocene to Pleistocene age indicate that savanna grasslands,
presumably dominated by C-4 grasses as they are today, first became wi
despread much later than do horses with high-crowned teeth. Prior to s
imilar to 7 m.y., horses had a C-3-based diet and after 7 m.y. horses
started eating C-4 grasses. This change in diet occurred when the majo
r drop in the diversity of horses occurs during the late Miocene. ?;he
change in vegetation reflected in horses' diet may be related to a si
gnificant reduction in atmospheric CO2 level toward the end of the Mio
cene which provided the C-4 grasses with an adaptive advantage and led
to their expansion at the expense of C-3 plants.