FN Archimer Export Format PT J TI How Far into Europe Did Pikas (Lagomorpha: Ochotonidae) Go during the Pleistocene? New Evidence from Central Iberia BT AF LAPLANA, Cesar SEVILLA, Paloma LUIS ARSUAGA, Juan CARMEN ARRIAZA, Mari BAQUEDANO, Enrique PEREZ-GONZALEZ, Alfredo LOPEZ-MARTINEZ, Nieves AS 1:1;2:2;3:2,3;4:4,5;5:1,5;6:6;7:2; FF 1:;2:;3:;4:;5:;6:;7:; C1 Museo Arqueol Reg Comunidad Madrid, Madrid, Spain. Univ Complutense Madrid, Fac Ciencias Geol, Dept Paleontol, Madrid, Spain. Ctr Mixto UCM ISCIII Evoluc & Comportamiento Huma, Madrid, Spain. Univ Alcala de Henares, Dept Geol Geog & Medio Ambiente, E-28871 Alcala De Henares, Spain. Inst Evoluc Africa IDEA, Madrid, Spain. Ctr Nacl Invest Evoluc Humana CENIEH, Burgos, Spain. C2 MUSEO ARQUEOL REG COMUNIDAD MADRID, SPAIN UNIV COMPLUTENSE MADRID, SPAIN CENTRO MIXTO UCM-ISCII, SPAIN UNIV ALCALA DE HENARES, SPAIN IDEA, SPAIN CENIEH, SPAIN IN DOAJ IF 3.057 TC 14 UR https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00351/46232/46121.pdf LA English DT Article CR IMAGES 1-MD101 MD 134 / PICABIA MD 142 / ALIENOR 2 BO Marion Dufresne AB This paper reports the first find of pika remains in the Iberian Peninsula, at a site in central Spain. A fragmented mandible of Ochotona cf. pusilla was unearthed from Layer 3 (deposited some 63.4 +/- 5.5 ka ago as determined by thermoluminescence) of the Buena Pinta Cave. This record establishes new limits for the genus geographic distribution during the Pleistocene, shifting the previous edge of its known range southwest by some 500 km. It also supports the idea that, even though Europe's alpine mountain ranges represented a barrier that prevented the dispersal into the south to this and other taxa of small mammals from central and eastern Europe, they were crossed or circumvented at the coldest time intervals of the end of the Middle Pleistocene and of the Late Pleistocene. During those periods both the reduction of the forest cover and the emersion of large areas of the continental shelf due to the drop of the sea level probably provided these species a way to surpass this barrier. The pika mandible was found accompanying the remains of other small mammals adapted to cold climates, indicating the presence of steppe environments in central Iberia during the Late Pleistocene. PY 2015 PD NOV SO Plos One SN 1932-6203 PU Public Library Science VL 10 IS 11 UT 000364298400022 DI 10.1371/journal.pone.0140513 ID 46232 ER EF