The Ritz Herald
Woolly rhinoceroses were once widely distributed across northern and central Eurasia, before going extinct some 10,000 years ago. © Mauricio Anton

Human Hunting Linked to Woolly Rhinoceros Extinction, New Research Reveals


Human activity contributed to woolly rhinoceros’ extinction

Published on June 04, 2024

Researchers have discovered that sustained human hunting prevented the woolly rhinoceros from accessing favorable habitats as Earth warmed following the Last Ice Age.

An international team of researchers, led by scientists from the University of Adelaide and the University of Copenhagen, made the discovery using computer modeling, shedding light on an eons-old mystery.

“Using computer models, fossils and ancient DNA, we traced 52,000 years of population history of the woolly rhinoceros across Eurasia at a resolution not previously considered possible,” said lead author Associate Professor Damien Fordham, from the University of Adelaide’s Environment Institute.

“This showed that from 30,000 years ago, a combination of cooling temperatures and low but sustained hunting by humans caused the woolly rhinoceros to contract its distribution southward, trapping it in a scattering of isolated and rapidly deteriorating habitats at the end of the Last Ice Age.

“As Earth thawed and temperatures rose, populations of woolly rhinoceros were unable to colonize important new habitats opening up in the north of Eurasia, causing them to destabilize and crash, bringing about their extinction.”

An iconic megafauna species, the woolly rhinoceros had thick skin and long fur, and it once roamed the mammoth step of northern and central Eurasia before its extinction around 10,000 years ago.

This recent discovery, published in PNAS, contradicts previous research that found humans had no role in the extinction of the woolly rhinoceros – despite the animal co-occurring with humans for tens of thousands of years before its extinction.

“The demographic responses revealed by our analysis were at a much higher resolution to those captured in previous genetic studies,” said Professor Eline Lorenzen, from the University of Copenhagen’s Globe Institute.

“This allowed us to pinpoint important interactions that woolly rhinoceroses had with humans and document how these changed through space and time. One of these largely overlooked interactions was persistent low levels of hunting by humans, probably for food.”

Humans pose a similar environmental threat today. Large animal populations have been pushed into fragmented and suboptimal habitat ranges due to overhunting and human land-use change.

There were 61 species of large terrestrial herbivores—weighing more than one tonne—alive in the late Pleistocene, but only eight of these survive today. Five of those surviving species are rhinoceroses.

“Our findings reveal how climate change and human activities can lead to megafauna extinctions,” said Professor David Nogues-Bravo, from the University of Copenhagen, who was a co-author of this study.

“This understanding is crucial for developing conservation strategies to protect currently threatened species, like vulnerable rhinos in Africa and Asia. By studying past extinctions, we can provide valuable lessons for safeguarding Earth’s remaining large animals.”

Staff Writer