INTRODUCTION
Researchers have only recently begun to understand the late Pleistocene faunas of eastern Africa, despite their critical role for interpreting the paleoenvironmental context of a time and place central to the diversification and dispersal of early modern humans (Homo sapiens) (Henn et al., Reference Henn, Steele and Weaver2018; Scerri et al., Reference Scerri, Thomas, Manica, Gunz, Stock, Stringer, Grove, Groucutt, Timmermann, Rightmire, d'Errico, Tryon, Drake, Brooks, Dennell, Durbin, Henn, Lee-Thorp, deMenocal, Petraglia, Thompson, Scally and Chikhi2018; Tryon, Reference Tryon2019). The late Pleistocene large mammal communities were composed of numerous extinct taxa, some of which were dominant members of the region's faunas until the onset of the Holocene (MacInnes, Reference MacInnes1956; Marean and Gifford-Gonzalez, Reference Marean and Gifford-Gonzalez1991; Marean, 1992; Faith, Reference Faith2014; Faith et al., Reference Faith, Tryon, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese and Patterson2015; Lesur et al., Reference Lesur, Faith, Bon, Dessie, Ménard and Bruxelles2016; Tryon et al., Reference Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese, Patterson and Sharp2016). This emerging perspective has been reinforced by ongoing research in the Kenyan portions of the Lake Victoria Basin since 2008, which has documented numerous extinct taxa (Rusingoryx atopocranion, Damaliscus hypsodon, Kolpochoerus, and others) in late Pleistocene sediments, including new species or those formerly thought to have disappeared from eastern Africa during the middle Pleistocene (e.g., Tryon et al., Reference Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Fox, McNulty, Jenkins, Garrett, Dunsworth and Harcourt-Smith2010, 2012, Reference Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese, Patterson and Sharp2016; Faith et al., Reference Faith, Choiniere, Tryon, Peppe and Fox2011, Reference Faith2014, 2015; Jenkins et al., Reference Jenkins, Nightingale, Faith, Peppe, Michel, Driese, McNulty and Tryon2017). These new data show that Homo sapiens in eastern Africa evolved among non-analog faunal communities (e.g., Faith et al., Reference Faith, Tryon, Peppe, Jones and Stewart2016), as has long been recognized for southern Africa (e.g., Klein, 1980).
A better understanding of the paleoecology of the extinct species that were a part of these communities is critical to paleoenvironmental and archaeological research. Developing a robust understanding of dietary ecology, habitat preferences, and locomotor strategy is an essential step in the use of fossil taxa as paleoenvironmental indicators (Faith and Lyman, Reference Faith and Lyman2019). In turn, such knowledge facilitates the study of human-environment interactions, and provides insight into hunting and subsistence methods, potential proxies for past human mobility, population density, and cognitive ability (e.g., Marean, 1997; Klein and Cruz-Uribe, Reference Klein and Cruz-Uribe2000; Faith, 2008; Wadley, 2010). However, a challenge in developing a fuller and more detailed paleoecological understanding of extinct species from African Pleistocene sites (and earlier) is that most are known almost exclusively from taxonomically diagnostic craniodental remains. Sites with large assemblages of reliably associated postcranial remains or taxa with diagnostic features in many postcranial elements are rare. An important exception is the Bovid Hill archaeological site at Wakondo on Rusinga Island within Lake Victoria (Fig. 1) (see also Marean, 1990, 1992, 1997), which preserves a large, monospecific bonebed that resulted from the targeted hunting of a herd of the extinct bovid R. atopocranion (Jenkins et al., Reference Jenkins, Nightingale, Faith, Peppe, Michel, Driese, McNulty and Tryon2017).
Rapid burial in fluvial and alluvial sediments at Bovid Hill led to the preservation of a large amount of associated skeletal material with both cranial and postcranial elements of R. atopocranion. The Bovid Hill assemblage thus affords a rare opportunity to provide a more holistic understanding of its ecology. In addition to the bonebed accumulation at Bovid Hill, remains of the alcelaphin bovid Rusingoryx have been recovered from other late Pleistocene sediments (~100–36 ka) around the Kenyan Lake Victoria Basin, including both Rusinga and Mfangano islands and mainland sites Luanda West and Karungu (Faith et al., Reference Faith, Choiniere, Tryon, Peppe and Fox2011; O'Brien et al., Reference O'Brien, Faith, Jenkins, Peppe, Plummer, Jacobs, Li, Joannes-Boyau, Price, Feng and Tryon2016; Tryon et al., Reference Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese, Patterson and Sharp2016; Blegen et al., Reference Blegen, Faith, Mant-Melville, Peppe and Tryon2017; Jenkins et al., Reference Jenkins, Nightingale, Faith, Peppe, Michel, Driese, McNulty and Tryon2017).
Rusingoryx atopocranion is the most abundant species recovered from many of these late Pleistocene deposits, indicating its important role for understanding the paleoecology and paleoenvironments of the Lake Victoria Basin (Faith et al., Reference Faith, Tryon, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese and Patterson2015; Tryon et al., Reference Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese, Patterson and Sharp2016). Importantly, fossils of R. atopocranion co-occur with hominin fossils attributed to H. sapiens (Grine, Reference Grine, Jones and Stewart2016; Pearson et al., Reference Pearson, Hill, Peppe, Van Plantinga, Blegen, Faith and Tryon2020) and Middle Stone Age (MSA) artifacts (Tryon et al., Reference Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Fox, McNulty, Jenkins, Garrett, Dunsworth and Harcourt-Smith2010, 2012, Reference Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Keegan, Keegan, Jenkins, Nightingale, Patterson, Van Plantinga, Driese, Johnson and Beverly2014; Faith et al., Reference Faith, Tryon, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese and Patterson2015; Blegen et al., Reference Blegen, Faith, Mant-Melville, Peppe and Tryon2017; Jenkins et al., Reference Jenkins, Nightingale, Faith, Peppe, Michel, Driese, McNulty and Tryon2017), the latter providing the archaeological context of early modern humans in eastern Africa (Tryon and Faith, Reference Tryon and Faith2013; Tryon, Reference Tryon2019). Past work in the Lake Victoria Basin has documented the expansion of Serengeti-like grasslands across the region in the late Pleistocene (e.g., Tryon et al., Reference Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Fox, McNulty, Jenkins, Garrett, Dunsworth and Harcourt-Smith2010, 2012, Reference Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese, Patterson and Sharp2016; Faith et al., Reference Faith, Tryon, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese and Patterson2015; Garrett et al., Reference Garrett, Fox, McNulty, Faith, Peppe, Van Plantinga and Tryon2015), likely in response to increased aridity and desiccation of the lake (e.g., Beverly et al., Reference Beverly, Driese, Peppe, Arellano, Blegen, Faith and Tryon2015a, Reference Beverly, Peppe, Driese, Blegen, Faith, Tryon and Stinchcomb2017, Reference Beverly, White, Peppe, Faith, Blegen and Tryon2020). This interpretation has been heavily influenced by the fossil faunas, including inferences based on the dominance of R. atopocranion, which was assumed to have had an affinity for open grassland habitats similar to extant alcelaphins (e.g., Faith et al., Reference Faith, Choiniere, Tryon, Peppe and Fox2011; Faith, Reference Faith2014). However, the craniodental remains of this species are unusual compared to other bovids and, indeed, are without parallel among other mammals—it has a large, hollow nasal crest otherwise known only from lambeosaurine hadrosaur dinosaurs (O'Brien et al., Reference O'Brien, Faith, Jenkins, Peppe, Plummer, Jacobs, Li, Joannes-Boyau, Price, Feng and Tryon2016). That the postcranial anatomy and other behavioral aspects of Rusingoryx are comparable to those of other alcelaphin bovids represents a series of assumptions or untested hypotheses. By relying solely on the untested assumption of taxonomic uniformitarianism, we cannot evaluate how the past might have differed from the present (e.g., Behrensmeyer et al., Reference Behrensmeyer, Bobe, Alemseged, Bobe, Alemseged and Behrensmeyer2007). With this in mind, our goal here is to provide an assessment of the habitat preferences of R. atopocranion through an ecomorphological analysis of the large postcranial sample from Bovid Hill.
Rusingoryx atopocranion
Rusingoryx atopocranion was described by Pickford and Thomas (Reference Pickford and Thomas1984) on the basis of a partial cranium from the Wakondo locality on Rusinga Island. Because most of the face was not preserved, they did not anticipate the nasal dome that has since been observed on more complete specimens (O'Brien et al., Reference O'Brien, Faith, Jenkins, Peppe, Plummer, Jacobs, Li, Joannes-Boyau, Price, Feng and Tryon2016). This resulted in incorrect anatomical orientation of the type specimen (e.g., the dorsal cranium was thought to be anterior), leading Pickford and Thomas (Reference Pickford and Thomas1984) to infer an aberrant morphology that included dramatic shortening of the face and the presence of a proboscis—hence the species name atopocranion (= strange skull). Harris (Reference Harris and Harris1991) later observed similarities between the cranial architecture of the type specimen and Megalotragus from Koobi Fora, and suggested that Rusingoryx be considered a junior synonym of Megalotragus. This opinion prevailed for the next two decades, until Faith et al. (Reference Faith, Choiniere, Tryon, Peppe and Fox2011) provided morphological and systematic analyses of new material recovered from Rusinga Island that suggested Rusingoryx could not be accommodated within Megalotragus. Subsequent analyses of complete crania recovered from the Bovid Hill site on Rusinga Island supported this taxonomic assessment, though it is clear that Rusingoryx is a recent offshoot of Megalotragus (O'Brien et al., Reference O'Brien, Faith, Jenkins, Peppe, Plummer, Jacobs, Li, Joannes-Boyau, Price, Feng and Tryon2016). O'Brien et al. (Reference O'Brien, Faith, Jenkins, Peppe, Plummer, Jacobs, Li, Joannes-Boyau, Price, Feng and Tryon2016) demonstrated that unlike any other known mammals, R. atopocranion has a hollow nasal crest comparable to those of some lambeosaurine hadrosaur dinosaurs, a bizarre morphology hypothesized to facilitate the production of low-frequency vocalizations in open and grassy habitats. Thus, Rusingoryx does indeed have a strange skull, although not for the reasons initially suggested by Pickford and Thomas (Reference Pickford and Thomas1984).
In terms of its masticatory anatomy, the combination of extreme hypsodonty and a reduced premolar row suggested that R. atopocranion was a hyper-grazer (Faith et al., Reference Faith, Choiniere, Tryon, Peppe and Fox2011). This is supported by stable carbon isotopic evidence indicating a diet dominated by C4 plant biomass (Faith et al., Reference Faith, Tryon, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese and Patterson2015; Garrett et al., Reference Garrett, Fox, McNulty, Faith, Peppe, Van Plantinga and Tryon2015; Tryon et al., Reference Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese, Patterson and Sharp2016), consistent with the diet of its living (Connochaetes taurinus) and fossil (Megalotragus) relatives (Kingdon and Hoffman, Reference Kingdon and Hoffman2013; Cerling et al., 2015). Analyses of ancient soils, associated fossil taxa, and bathymetric reconstructions suggest that open and grassy habitats were widespread throughout much of the late Pleistocene in the Lake Victoria Basin. The region was considerably drier than modern times from ~100–36 ka, which probably resulted in the complete desiccation of Lake Victoria and an expansion of a Serengeti-like ecosystem across the basin (Tryon et al., Reference Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Keegan, Keegan, Jenkins, Nightingale, Patterson, Van Plantinga, Driese, Johnson and Beverly2014, Reference Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese, Patterson and Sharp2016; Beverly et al., Reference Beverly, Driese, Peppe, Arellano, Blegen, Faith and Tryon2015a, Reference Beverly, Driese, Peppe, Johnson, Michel, Faith and Sharpb, Reference Beverly, Peppe, Driese, Blegen, Faith, Tryon and Stinchcomb2017, Reference Beverly, White, Peppe, Faith, Blegen and Tryon2020; Faith et al., Reference Faith, Tryon, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese and Patterson2015).
With no postcranial remains definitely attributed to the species until recovery of the Bovid Hill assemblage, nothing could be said about its behavior or ecology from the perspective of postcranial skeletal morphology. Here, we provide such an assessment through analysis of a large assemblage of postcranial remains from Bovid Hill at Wakondo, on Rusinga Island, within Lake Victoria. At Bovid Hill, remnants of a herd of R. atopocranion were recovered from a shallow channel deposit where rapid sedimentation preserved a large sample of nearly complete elements of individuals from a range of ages (Jenkins et al., Reference Jenkins, Nightingale, Faith, Peppe, Michel, Driese, McNulty and Tryon2017). As one of the dominant species in the basin, the postcranial anatomy, locomotor patterns, and adaptations of R. atopocranion play an important role in further assessing the palaeoecology of Pleistocene Lake Victoria region, as well as the evolutionary history of eastern African bovids.
Rusingoryx ecomorphology
Skeletal adaptations to physical environmental conditions, or ecomorphologies, are commonly studied aspects of mammalian anatomy. Long bones, phalanges, and even some carpals and tarsals are effective indicators of the physical characteristics of the habitat that animals in multiple families exploit (e.g., van Valkenburgh, Reference Van Valkenburgh1987; Kappelman, Reference Kappelman1988; Plummer and Bishop, Reference Plummer and Bishop1994; DeGusta and Vrba, Reference DeGusta and Vrba2005; Kovarovic and Andrews, Reference Kovarovic and Andrews2007; Curran, Reference Curran2012; Meloro et al., Reference Meloro, Elton, Louys, Bishop and Ditchfield2013; Barr, Reference Barr2014). This is particularly the case with bovids whose taxonomic, geographic, and behavioral diversity have resulted in nuanced differences in their skeletal elements that reflect their ecology, which in turn reflects differences in their habitats. Multiple studies have demonstrated that, for example, a highly cursorial species living in open environments that relies on outrunning predators can be distinguished from species inhabiting closed habitats with significant vegetation cover that favor camouflage or hiding as a means of predator defence (Kappelman, Reference Kappelman1988; Köhler, Reference Köhler1993; Plummer and Bishop, Reference Plummer and Bishop1994; Barr, Reference Barr2014). The array of ecomorphologies displayed by an entire fossil community can be assessed in order to develop a composite picture of the habitat types that once supported the community, making this a useful method of paleoenvironmental reconstruction (e.g., Kovarovic and Andrews, Reference Kovarovic and Andrews2007). However, ecomorphological studies are also typically used to evaluate the behavior of a particular species where this is not well understood (e.g. Faith et al., Reference Faith, Potts, Plummer, Bishop, Marean and Tryon2012; Fabre et al., Reference Fabre, Salesa, Cornette, Antón, Morales and Peigné2015; Barr, Reference Barr, Croft, Simpson and Su2018).
Wakondo “Bovid Hill” Site
While Rusingoryx is now recognized from many sites in the eastern Lake Victoria Basin, specimens used in this study come from the type site for Rusingoryx atopocranion, Wakondo, a Pleistocene locality on Rusinga Island (Pickford and Thomas, Reference Pickford and Thomas1984) (Fig. 1). A dense bonebed of Rusingoryx specimens was the focus of surface collections in 2007–2009 at a sub-locality of Wakondo named “Bovid Hill” (O'Brien et al., Reference O'Brien, Faith, Jenkins, Peppe, Plummer, Jacobs, Li, Joannes-Boyau, Price, Feng and Tryon2016), which was likely the same area collected by Pickford and Thomas (Reference Pickford and Thomas1984). Preliminary excavations in 2009 established the in situ nature of the Wakondo deposits and the stratigraphic position of the Bovid Hill site within the Wasiriya Beds (Tryon et al., Reference Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Fox, McNulty, Jenkins, Garrett, Dunsworth and Harcourt-Smith2010). In 2011, targeted archaeological excavations at Bovid Hill totaling 19 m2 uncovered additional Rusingoryx specimens (MNI = 11) with associated MSA stone tools and cut-marked specimens (Jenkins et al., Reference Jenkins, Nightingale, Faith, Peppe, Michel, Driese, McNulty and Tryon2017). Unusually, the excavation includes a number of individuals where crania and post-crania can be directly associated, with a large portion of the skeleton represented in the composite sample from the site (see Fig. 2). The bonebed rests in a coarse-grained, cut and fill fluvial deposit atop a partially eroded Vertisol. OSL dates from the Bovid Hill excavation indicate an age of 68 ± 5 ka for the bonebed (Blegen et al., Reference Blegen, Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Beverly, Li and Jacobs2015).
Skeletal part frequencies from the 2011 Bovid Hill excavations point to a density-mediated and fluvially winnowed assemblage, where low-density elements and portions of elements are relatively rare (Jenkins et al., Reference Jenkins, Nightingale, Faith, Peppe, Michel, Driese, McNulty and Tryon2017). Mortality profiles based on dental remains from both surface finds and the excavated collection indicate a prime-dominated assemblage (Jenkins et al., Reference Jenkins, Nightingale, Faith, Peppe, Michel, Driese, McNulty and Tryon2017). Sexual dimorphism is not well understood in Rusingoryx, but given the lack of very young juveniles (individuals under 12 months) at Bovid Hill, it is possible that the assemblage represents a bachelor herd (O'Brien et al., Reference O'Brien, Faith, Jenkins, Peppe, Plummer, Jacobs, Li, Joannes-Boyau, Price, Feng and Tryon2016; Jenkins et al., Reference Jenkins, Nightingale, Faith, Peppe, Michel, Driese, McNulty and Tryon2017).
The excavated monospecific assemblage, taphonomic characteristics, prime-dominated mortality profiles, stone tools, and geologic context suggest that the assemblage may represent the remains of a mass kill site where MSA hunters employed tactical hunting techniques that used features of the landscape, such as topographic lows or water features, to corral and disable large portions of animals herds (Jenkins et al., Reference Jenkins, Nightingale, Faith, Peppe, Michel, Driese, McNulty and Tryon2017). Alternatively, the site may represent a scavenged mass drowning from a flash flood starting in the adjacent highlands of Rusinga, although the low competency of the reconstructed paleo-channel make this latter explanation less likely (Jenkins et al., Reference Jenkins, Nightingale, Faith, Peppe, Michel, Driese, McNulty and Tryon2017).
Given the high quality of the Bovid Hill sample of multiple Rusingoryx individuals, and the relative rarity of extinct Pleistocene African mammals associated with postcranial elements, we are in the unique position to be able to investigate the ecological niche of this unusual species using a suite of skeletal elements and adaptive characters. Here we present an ecomorphological analysis of the entirety of the appendicular skeleton available for Rusingoryx.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Skeletal elements and measurements
Complete long bones provide some of the best ecomorphological predictors of habitat, but they are uncommon in the fossil record. We therefore focused only on elements or portions of elements that are present in the Bovid Hill Rusingoryx sample. Studied long bones include the distal humerus, radius, metacarpal, proximal femur, distal femur, proximal tibia, and metatarsal. We also studied four carpals (magnum, unciform, lunar, and cuneiform) and four tarsals (astragalus, calcaneus, naviculo-cuboid, and the external and middle cuneiform). Proximal, intermediate, and distal phalanges were analyzed without consideration of their location on the fore- or hindlimb, due to the difficulty of identifying isolated phalanges to their correct limbs in the fossil record. Additionally, previous research has not found any difference between habitat assignments based on limb position of the phalanges (Louys et al., Reference Louys, Montanari, Plummer, Hertel and Bishop2013).
The measurements taken on each element or element portion are adapted from a previously published bovid ecomorphological study (Kovarovic and Andrews, Reference Kovarovic and Andrews2007). They include many standard archaeological and palaeontological measures of length and the diameters of the distal and proximal ends, as well as measurements targeted at capturing dimensions of the articular surfaces (Supplementary Material 1 and Supplementary Material 2, Figs. S1–S18). We note that it is far likelier that a fossil long bone will preserve its functional length (length between the proximal and distal articular surfaces) rather than the total length, so this measure was used. All measurements were taken with digital Mitutoyo calipers (instrument accuracy = 0.02 mm) or a Paleo-Tech osteometric board.
Analysis and statistical considerations
Ecomorphological analyses typically involve the use of multivariate predictive statistics to indicate which habitats fossil individuals were likely adapted to based on comparisons with a sample of extant known-habitat individuals. Discriminant function analysis (DFA) is commonly employed in this regard (e.g., Kovarovic et al., Reference Kovarovic, Aiello, Cardini and Lockwood2011; Faith and Lyman, Reference Faith and Lyman2019). Each individual in the comparative sample is assigned to an ecological category (e.g., habitat preference) given what is known of the species’ behavior, and the measurements of each element are the predictor variables used to determine the linear dimensions along which these habitat groups can be discriminated. The groups are clustered around a centroid (i.e., mean discriminant score). A probability is calculated for group membership based on proximity to each centroid; naturally, the extant individuals can be mis-classified to the incorrect habitat group. The success of a DFA model is thus based on the overall number of individuals correctly assigned to their known habitat category. Models with high success rates can then be used to predict the group affiliation of unknown individuals which, in this study, are the Rusingoryx fossil elements.
There are several important assumptions inherent to DFA. The number of predictor variables cannot exceed the number of individuals in the smallest group, for example, nor can they be collinear. The method also suffers from a problem with over-fitting whereby group predictions are usually better than expectations based on “chance” alone, even when the predictor variables bear no relationship to group membership (DeGusta and Vrba, Reference DeGusta and Vrba2003; Kovarovic et al., Reference Kovarovic, Aiello, Cardini and Lockwood2011; Luo et al., Reference Luo, Ding and Huang2011). For example, in a case where there are five groups, we would expect that there is a 1 in 5, or a 20%, chance of the assignments being correct, but in fact the overall proportion of correct assignments always surpasses this level. Success rates are also influenced by the number of groups, the total number of individuals in each group, and the number of predictor variables. For a detailed exploration of the issues arising from the application of DFA in archaeological and palaeontological contexts we refer readers to Kovarovic et al. (Reference Kovarovic, Aiello, Cardini and Lockwood2011). We follow their use of the Tau statistic in evaluating the relative success of each DFA model. Tau is a chance-corrected measure that does not control for the number of predictor variables, but takes group numbers and unequal group sizes into account. It is defined as:
where: N = total sample size; Nc = total number of cases correctly assigned by the DFA; Pi = prior probability of group membership in the i–th of the G groups; Ni = number of cases in the i–th group (Klecka, Reference Klecka1980; McGarigal et al., Reference McGarigal, Cushman and Stafford2000). When converted to a percentage, Tau provides a metric for assessing how many fewer misclassifications are made when compared to chance assignments.
We also report cross-validated results, which calculate the success rates of models based on a leave-one-out (i.e., jackknife) approach. Each individual case is held out of the calculation of the discriminant functions and then tested against the resulting model to see if it correctly assigns the case. The classification rate in this instance is the proportion of cases correctly assigned to the right group when they have not contributed information to the model, whereas the basic resubstitution results report the percentage of cases correctly assigned when they have been included. The cross-validated results indicate how well a model can be generalized; where the resubstitution and cross-validated success rates are similar, they are particularly robust.
Here we apply DFA to each skeletal element or element portion available in the Rusingoryx sample. However, not every element is as good as the next in predicting habitat affiliation. Complete long bones, phalanges, the astragalus, and calcaneus are particularly useful elements (Kappelman, Reference Kappelman1988; Plummer and Bishop, Reference Plummer and Bishop1994; DeGusta and Vrba Reference DeGusta and Vrba2003, Reference DeGusta and Vrba2005; Barr, Reference Barr2014), but the fossil record is replete with epiphyseal portions and smaller, irregular elements such as carpals that are somewhat less habitat-sensitive. This has important implications for the habitat schemes used in our analysis, which must be broad enough to be detected in the anatomy, while remaining sufficiently narrow to provide useful ecological information (Faith and Lyman, Reference Faith and Lyman2019). Because different elements and portions thereof vary in the amount of ecological information they provide concerning an animal's habitat adaptations, we considered a five- (most refined), four-, and three-category (least refined) system. These and the comparative species classifications are described in more detail below (see Habitat categories and assignments). We considered the best DFA model for each element to be the one that used the highest number of habitat categories where the resulting success rate was > 60% and the difference between the resubstitution and cross-validated rates was < 10%. These criteria are helpful in determining which DFA model was the best for each element, but Tau provides a statistical means for evaluating the success of all of our models despite variations in the number of habitat groups or unequal sample sizes per group. This approach allows us to survey the entire available Rusingoryx skeleton, while accounting for the fact that elements differ in sensitivity of the adaptive information they provide.
All measurements were log10-transformed for analysis. Variables determined to be multicollinear via a tolerance test were excluded from the calculations of the discriminant functions. In particular, a variable whose variance inflation factor is greater than 10 was excluded. Tau was calculated in Excel 2013. The tolerance test and DFAs were conducted in SPSS Version 22.
Bovid data
Comparative sample
The modern comparative bovid sample consists of African species; the total number of modern specimens differed in each DFA, ranging from n = 121 to n = 350 (see Supplementary Data 1). Effort was made to include a consistent number of specimens from the eight African bovid tribes (Alcelaphini, Cephalophini, Neotragini, Antilopini, Reduncini, Tragelaphini, Hippotragini, and Aepycerotini) and the habitat groups, but numbers of specimens in each group were constrained by their availability in museum collections. Data were collected at: The Natural History Museum, London, UK (NHM); Powell-Cotton Museum, Birchington-on-Sea, UK (PC); American Museum of Natural History, New York City, New York, USA (AMNH); National Museum of Natural History, Washington, DC, USA (NMNH); Field Museum, Chicago, Illinois, USA (Chic); Zoological Museum, Copenhagen, Denmark (Copen); Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm, Sweden (Stock); Natural History Museum Vienna, Austria (Vienna); Naturalis, Leiden, The Netherlands (Leiden); Museum of Natural History, Berlin, Germany (Berlin); Royal Museum of Central Africa, Tervuren, Belgium (RMCA); and Hungarian Natural History Museum, Budapest, Hungary (Buda) (institutional abbreviations are used to denote the locations of the individual specimens in the raw data file; see Supplementary Data 1). All of the specimens are adult, non-pathological, and were caught in the wild.
Fossil sample
Fossil collections from Rusinga Island are housed in the Palaeontology Department at the National Museums of Kenya (NMK) in Nairobi, where metric data were collected. The samples used in the current study are derived solely from the Bovid Hill bonebed assemblage and include both excavated and surface material (Jenkins et al., Reference Jenkins, Nightingale, Faith, Peppe, Michel, Driese, McNulty and Tryon2017). A total of 58 Rusingoryx specimens were sufficiently complete to be included here (Table 1).
Habitat categories and assignments
We use three different habitat category systems. The five-category system is the most refined and relates most clearly to specific habitat types. The four- and three-category systems largely describe the broad physical characteristics of the overall amount of cover provided by the vegetation. All of the habitat types present differences in the physical environments that animals must navigate during activities that affect survival, particularly predator avoidance.
The five-category habitat system is adapted from Kovarovic and Andrews (Reference Kovarovic and Andrews2007) where detailed descriptions of the habitat types can be found (and references therein). Brief definitions of each habitat are below:
Grassland/treeless (G/T) includes grasslands and deserts. Scattered woody cover may be present, but it does not exceed 2% of the overall surface.
Wooded-bushed grassland (WBG) are areas dominated by grasses, but also have trees and shrubs providing 2–40% cover. They are often ecotonal and the tree/shrub cover may be inconsistently distributed. This category also includes semi-desert habitats that are similar in the distribution of shrub and bush cover, but have seasonally fluctuating amounts of grass and herbaceous ground cover.
Light woodland-bushland (LWB) and heavy woodland-bushland (HWB) are categories distinguished largely by the amount of woody vegetation present. Light woodland-bushland equates to 40–60% woody cover and heavy woodland-bushland equates to 60–75%. Grasses may be present, but are inconsistently distributed and tend to decrease as the amount of tree and bush cover increases.
Forest (F) is where herbs and shrubs dominate the ground cover with few grasses. Woody vegetation is dense, more or less continuous, and the canopy can be comprised of interlocking crowns and multistoried trees with 75–100% woody cover.
The four-category habitat system is similar to the habitat system in other bovid ecomorphological studies. It subsumes the open/treeless and wooded-bushed grassland categories into one open-cover category (O). Light cover (LC), heavy cover (HC), and forest (F) are equivalent to LWB, HWB, and F, respectively, in the five-category system.
The three-category system recognizes a rather coarse difference between the amounts of vegetation cover overall, and is not strictly tied to well-defined habitat types. The differences among the three categories—open (O), intermediate (INT) and closed cover (C)—are much more approximate. The intermediate category is particularly broad, encompassing most woodlands, bushlands, and ecotones (sensu Plummer and Bishop, Reference Plummer and Bishop1994).
Habitat assignments for each of the modern species were based on observations of the living species and interpretations of the habitats where each species spends the majority of its time, even if they may be occasionally observed elsewhere. The majority of the observational and behavioral information that informed habitat assignments was found in Kingdon (Reference Kingdon2015), Nowak (Reference Nowak1999), and MacDonald (Reference MacDonald2001). Each species’ habitat assignment within each of the three habitat category systems can be found in Appendix 1.
RESULTS
Forelimb elements
The results of the forelimb DFAs are presented in Table 2, where they are ranked according to their Tau statistic values. The cross-validated results range from 55.8% (cuneiform) to 66.2% (unciform). The Tau statistic ranges from 29.3% (cuneiform) to 52.5% (metacarpal). The metacarpal analysis dropped four measurements because they failed the tolerance test for multicollinearity. These include the measure of the distance between the medial and lateral epicondyle at the most distal point (MC14), the antero-posterior and transverse mid-shaft diameters (MC15 and MC16), and the transverse diameter of the distal shaft (MC20) (see Figure S3). These variables are not included in the calculation of the final discriminant functions, but this analysis is the most successful according to the Tau statistic, which is the highest (52.5%). It also has a cross-validated success rate of 65.9%, second only to the unciform (66.2%).
In these forelimb element DFA models, all but one of the 20 Rusingoryx specimens are predicted to the most open habitat category (Table 2). One of the three radii is predicted to belong to the wooded-bushed grassland (WBG) category. Probabilities of assignment are moderate to high in the long bones (0.589–0.932), except for the one radius, which is predicted to WBG (0.465) (Figure 3). Probabilities of assignment are high in the carpals (0.729–1.000) (Figure 3).
Hindlimb elements
Hindlimb DFA results are ranked by Tau (Table 3). Cross-validated success rates range from 58.7% (proximal tibia) to 68.6% (metatarsal). The Tau statistic mirrors these results, identifying the best model as the metatarsal with 56.3%, and the worst as the proximal tibia with a value of 33.2%. Also note that the metatarsal model, like the metacarpal, suffers from multicollinearity. Six measurements fail the tolerance test and are therefore not included in the calculation of the final discriminant functions: the measure of the distance between the medial and lateral condyle at the most proximal (MT15) and the most distal point (MT16), the antero-posterior and transverse midshaft diameter (MT17 and MT18), and the antero-posterior and transverse diameter of the distal shaft (MT21 and MT22) (see Figure S7 in Supplementary Material).
All of the Rusingoryx hindlimb fossil specimens, except for the one distal femur, are assigned to the most open habitat (Table 3). The distal femur is predicted to the intermediate cover category, but this prediction is associated with a rather low probability (0.425). Only the single metatarsal has a lower probability (0.403). The remaining probabilities are moderate to high, ranging from 0.542 (a proximal tibia) to 0.963 (a naviculo-cuboid) (Figure 3).
Phalanges
The results of the three phalanges DFAs are in Table 4 ranked by Tau statistic values. The cross-validated success rates range from 59.1% (proximal phalanges) to 65.5% (distal phalanges). The Tau statistic indicates that the best model is the distal phalanges (55.1%) and the worst is the proximal phalanges (43.3%).
Rusingoryx phalanges are predicted to habitats that range from open to forest in each category system (Table 4). Of the 25 available phalanges, 11 of them are predicted to belong to the most open habitat category. Their associated probabilities are not very high, ranging from 0.387 to 0.624. Of the remaining 14 specimens, six are assigned to light-cover categories with probabilities ranging from 0.362 to 0.706 and eight to heavy cover or forest with probabilities ranging from 0.471 to 0.696.
DISCUSSION
Although there is a general correspondence between the ranking of the best DFA models indicated by the cross-validated success rates and Tau, only the Tau statistic can be compared equally across them because it accounts for differences in group numbers and group sizes. Converted to a percentage, Tau indicates how many fewer mistakes the DFA makes when compared to chance assignments. Comparing Tau and the success rate of the cuneiform DFA (Table 2), for example, the value of Tau becomes apparent; this model yields almost 56% correct habitat predictions, but it is only 29.3% better than chance. Although it is clear from the results that some DFA models are better than others, amongst the forelimb and hindlimb elements the complete long bones (radius, metacarpal, metatarsal, see Table 2 and Table 3) are the best and are the most ecologically nuanced, utilizing a four- or five-habitat classification system. Carpals, tarsals, and long bone portions are less ecologically sensitive, and have generally lower rates of success and Tau values.
Strikingly, despite variations in the sensitivity of the different elements, an overwhelming majority of the Rusingoryx forelimb and hindlimb specimens (31 out of 33) are predicted to belong to the most open cover habitat category, with the exception of one radius and one distal femur, which are assigned to the wooded-bushed grassland and intermediate cover categories, respectively. The associated probabilities of prediction for that radius and distal femur are, however, not high (radius = 0.465; distal femur = 0.425). Given that the overwhelming majority of the Rusingoryx material is assigned to the open cover habitats, it is likely that these two predictions are incorrect assignments. This could be related to measurement error or natural variation in morphology that is not adequately captured in the extant sample. An additional possibility is that the specimens in question belong to another species, but this is unlikely given that all of the taxonomically diagnostic craniodental remains from the excavation belong to Rusingoryx, and only a small number of surface-collected specimens from elsewhere at Bovid Hill belong to other bovid species (nine specimens = 7%) (Jenkins et al., Reference Jenkins, Nightingale, Faith, Peppe, Michel, Driese, McNulty and Tryon2017). It is interesting to note that the majority of these additional specimens from other bovid species also belong to open-habitat lineages, namely bovids of the tribe Alcelaphini (Jenkins et al., Reference Jenkins, Nightingale, Faith, Peppe, Michel, Driese, McNulty and Tryon2017).
Rusingoryx is an alcelaphin, a bovid tribe that today includes multiple gregarious species, such as the hartebeest (Alcelaphus buselaphus), that are associated with open and very lightly covered habitats, and wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus), which are generally found in open grasslands and shrubland plains over which some populations traverse hundreds of miles in well-documented annual migrations. Alcelaphins are considered some of the most open and arid-adapted bovid taxa; their general cursorial morphologies, such as long metapodials (Hildebrand, Reference Hildebrand1974) and oblong femoral heads (Kappelman, Reference Kappelman1988), are associated with an increased stride length, hindlimb propulsion during rapid locomotion, and the restriction of locomotion to the parasagittal plane. This behavior is necessary for fleeing predators across an open landscape or towards ecotonal areas where cover may be sought.
Morphology and habitat preference are phylogenetically conserved in bovids and, as such, our results are not strictly “taxon-free.” Depending on which species are included in the comparative sample of the DFA (and other analytical approaches we have not employed), phylogeny can affect the ecomorphological analyses to a certain degree (Barr, Reference Barr2014; Barr and Scott, Reference Barr and Scott2014; Scott and Barr, Reference Scott and Barr2014; Lazagabaster et al., Reference Lazagabaster, Rowan, Kamilar and Reed2016). Our analyses may therefore somewhat overfit the data, but the ecological signal was remarkably clear regardless. Phylogenetic comparative methods arguably would not have provided any greater clarity in our interpretation of Rusingoryx. Our survey of its available forelimb and hindlimb skeleton in fact suggests that it was an alcelaphin par excellence in terms of its locomotion, exceptionally well adapted to open habitats, much like modern wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus). The picture does become less clear when we consider the results of the pooled-limb phalanges analyses (Table 4). Only 11 of the available 25 phalanges are assigned to the most open habitat, with relatively low associated probabilities of correct assignment. The remainder of the phalanges are assigned to habitats across the spectrum of vegetation cover, from light woodland-bushland to forest. We suspect this relates to the remarkably short phalanges of Rusingoryx, shown in Figure 4, which illustrates phalanx length and breadth relative to overall phalanx size (= the geometric mean of all measurements) for Rusingoryx and the bovids in our extant comparative sample. The fact that Rusingoryx falls at or beyond the limits of similarly sized bovids means that its morphology is not well represented by the modern taxa used to create the DFA models, which likely contributes to the varied habitat assignments with relatively weak probabilities (Table 4). Given the large size and ecological breadth of our comparative sample of extant bovids, these differences suggest postcranial features or adaptations without a clear modern analog.
The ecological significance of the Rusingoryx phalanx morphology is harder to explain in the absence of modern bovid analogs, although others have noted that relatively short phalanges relative to width are typical of both open and heavy-cover taxa (see DeGusta and Vrba, Reference DeGusta and Vrba2005, fig. 4). Short phalanges are generally associated with open-country species, while the opposite morphology—relatively long and splayed phalanges—is today found in species such as Tragelaphus spekei (sitatunga) (DeGusta and Vrba, Reference DeGusta and Vrba2005; Kingdon, Reference Kingdon2015), which prefers swampy areas, where phalanx morphology is considered an adaptation to waterlogged terrain. The greater surface area of longer phalanges provides support in swampy conditions, but inhibits efficient running on stable surfaces (Kingdon, Reference Kingdon2015). In contrast, cursorial animals tend to have reduced phalanges (e.g., Coombs, Reference Coombs1978), perhaps in part because lighter hooves allow for greater speed and reduced energetic costs of locomotion (e.g., Clifford, Reference Clifford2010; McHorse et al., Reference McHorse, Biewener and Pierce2017) We posit that phalanx morphology of Rusingoryx is functionally significant, rather than adaptively neutral, and when coupled the overwhelming evidence from the rest of the postcrania of Rusingoryx, suggests that the shortened phalanges are an extreme open-habitat adaptation beyond the range of extant species.
Interestingly, given the extremely shortened phalanges, which result in a small surface area of the hooves is in contact with the ground, water-logged environments were likely challenging for Rusingoryx. This in turn may have made Rusingoryx particularly vulnerable to predators or human hunters when drinking from springs and streams on the landscape, such as at Bovid Hill assemblage, which is interpreted a kill site where hominins strategically ambushed the herd in a riverine setting (Jenkins et al., Reference Jenkins, Nightingale, Faith, Peppe, Michel, Driese, McNulty and Tryon2017).
The availability of multiple skeletal elements for our study has provided a far more comprehensive picture of the locomotor behavior and ecology of Rusingoryx than single-element analyses are capable of providing. Taken together, our ecomorphological survey of the skeleton of Rusingoryx suggests a species that was very well adapted for open and probably dry habitats, perhaps even more so than its closest living relatives. This plausibly explains its dominance in late Pleistocene deposits in the Lake Victoria Basin, which sampled expanded grassy plains in an arid climate (Tryon et al., Reference Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Keegan, Keegan, Jenkins, Nightingale, Patterson, Van Plantinga, Driese, Johnson and Beverly2014, Reference Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese, Patterson and Sharp2016; Beverly et al., Reference Beverly, Driese, Peppe, Arellano, Blegen, Faith and Tryon2015a, Reference Beverly, Driese, Peppe, Johnson, Michel, Faith and Sharpb, Reference Beverly, Peppe, Driese, Blegen, Faith, Tryon and Stinchcomb2017; Faith et al., Reference Faith, Tryon, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese and Patterson2015). This accords well with other indicators of the behavior of Rusingoryx and paleoecological proxies. Its grazing diet is indicated by the general skeletal morphology, mesowear patterns (Faith et al., Reference Faith, Choiniere, Tryon, Peppe and Fox2011), and stable carbon isotopic analyses of its teeth (Faith et al., Reference Faith, Tryon, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese and Patterson2015; Garrett et al., Reference Garrett, Fox, McNulty, Faith, Peppe, Van Plantinga and Tryon2015; Tryon et al., Reference Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese, Patterson and Sharp2016), suggesting that, like extant alcelaphins, it was a grazer that consumed primarily C4 grasses, perhaps supplementing only occasionally with shrubs or broad leaves. Its nasal dome is also interpreted as a communication device that propagated sound in open habitats (O'Brien et al., Reference O'Brien, Faith, Jenkins, Peppe, Plummer, Jacobs, Li, Joannes-Boyau, Price, Feng and Tryon2016).
Rusingoryx is found throughout the late Pleistocene sequence at Bovid Hill (~100 ka to 36 ka) in western Kenya (Faith et al., Reference Faith, Tryon, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese and Patterson2015; O'Brien et al., Reference O'Brien, Faith, Jenkins, Peppe, Plummer, Jacobs, Li, Joannes-Boyau, Price, Feng and Tryon2016; Tryon et al., Reference Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese, Patterson and Sharp2016), after which there is no further Pleistocene sedimentary record from terrestrial deposits within the Lake Victoria Basin. As yet, and despite its local abundance in the fossil record, the taxon is currently unknown outside the Lake Victoria Basin. This may reflect an accurate measure of its former geographic range or perhaps a reflection of the limited paleontological research on the late Pleistocene of eastern Africa, as there are few late Pleistocene assemblages with detailed systematic descriptions (e.g., Rowan et al., Reference Rowan, Faith, Gebru and Fleagle2015). In the absence of younger sediments around Lake Victoria and a more clear understanding of when Rusingoryx made its last appearance in the basin, it is difficult to pin down the reasons for its demise. However, we note that given its clear affinity for open habitats, it is likely that Rusingoryx inhabited the grassy plains that were exposed by the reduction of Lake Victoria due to the dry conditions that persisted throughout the ~100–36 ka interval (Tryon et al., Reference Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Keegan, Keegan, Jenkins, Nightingale, Patterson, Van Plantinga, Driese, Johnson and Beverly2014, Reference Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese, Patterson and Sharp2016; Beverly et al., Reference Beverly, Driese, Peppe, Arellano, Blegen, Faith and Tryon2015a, Reference Beverly, Driese, Peppe, Johnson, Michel, Faith and Sharpb, Reference Beverly, Peppe, Driese, Blegen, Faith, Tryon and Stinchcomb2017, Reference Beverly, White, Peppe, Faith, Blegen and Tryon2020; Faith et al., Reference Faith, Tryon, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese and Patterson2015).
There are several currently undated terraces around the margins of Lake Victoria, some up to ~18 m above current lake levels, which indicate the occurrence of previous highstands in the lake (Doornkamp and Temple, Reference Doornkamp and Temple1966; Temple, Reference Temple1966; Bishop, Reference Bishop1969; Stager and Johnson, Reference Stager and Johnson2008). We propose that at some point during the late Pleistocene, Lake Victoria began to refill and expanded to its maximum highstand, causing a shift in depositional patterns that mark the end of the formation of the Wasiriya Beds. Based on comparisons with Holocene and recent analogs (Andrews, Reference Andrews1973; Stager and Johnson, Reference Stager and Johnson2008; Tryon et al., Reference Tryon, Faith, Peppe, Beverly, Blegen, Blumenthal, Chritz, Driese, Patterson and Sharp2016), the potential highstand would have caused an increase in humidity and precipitation, changing the regional environment. The increase in moisture would have eliminated much of the formerly grassy plains in the central basin and contributed to grassy habitats along the margin of the lake becoming compressed or replaced with more closed habitats unsuitable to Rusingoryx. In fact, the loss of Rusingoryx near the end of the Pleistocene fits in with the overall loss of open-grassland specialists across Africa during the late Pleistocene (Faith, Reference Faith2014) and a long-term decline of grazers in eastern Africa over the last million years (Faith et al., Reference Faith, Rowan and Du2019).
CONCLUSION
Rusingoryx atopocranion is an extinct alcelaphin bovid found across multiple sites of late Pleistocene age in the eastern portions of the equatorial Africa's Lake Victoria Basin, where at least locally, it is one of the dominant large herbivores in the fossil record. This taxon, therefore, plays an outsized role in our understanding of past ecological communities in the region, communities that are particularly important for providing the context for the diversification and dispersal of early modern humans (Homo sapiens). Although taxonomic, functional, and isotopic analyses of fossil fauna are routinely used to characterize past environments, these analyses are usually based on craniodental material alone, in part because of the difficulty of identifying bovid postcrania to lower taxonomic levels. However, postcrania can be particularly informative about the paleoecology of fossil species, and we used the fortuitous preservation of a mass death assemblage of Rusingoryx from the Bovid Hill site on Rusinga Island to provide fuller reconstruction of its ecology.
Our ecomorphological analyses consistently point to morphological adaptations to open habitats, including extreme adaptations, such as short phalanges, that are not present among modern bovids. These results contribute to a greater understanding of the mosaic of features that characterized R. atopocranion in general, and serve to highlight the ephemeral nature of Lake Victoria. While the lake is the largest in Africa as measured by surface area today, it is shallow and was probably absent throughout much of the late Pleistocene (Beverly et al., Reference Beverly, White, Peppe, Faith, Blegen and Tryon2020) and replaced by some form of grassland habitat occupied by species such as R. atopocranion, fundamentally altering the dispersal potential of early H. sapiens and other floras and faunas in the region.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Thanks go to many people who facilitated data collection on extant bovid material in Europe and the US over several years: The Natural History Museum, London: Paula Jenkins, Daphne Hills, Louise Tomsett, Rob Kruszynski; Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, Washington DC: Linda Gordon; American Museum of Natural History, NYC: Bob Randall, Eileen Westwig, Neil Duncan; Field Museum, Chicago: Bill Stanley; Powell-Cotton Museum, Kent, UK: Malcolm Harmon; Zoological Museum, Copenhagen, Denmark: Hans Baagoe, Mogens Andersen; Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm: Per Ericson, Olavi Gronwall, Lars Werdelin; Natural History Museum Vienna, Austria: Barbara Herzig, Helen Jousse, Alexander Bibl; Naturalis, Leiden, The Netherlands: Lars van der Hoek Ostende, John de Vos, Hein van Grouw; Museum of Natural History, Berlin, Germany: Frieder Meyer, Detlef Willborn, Irene Mann; Royal Museum of Central Africa, Tervuren, Belgium: Emmanuel Gilissen, Wim Wendelin, Garin Cael; Hungarian Natural History Museum, Budapest: Gabor Csorba, Laszlo Peregovits, Zoltan Vos. Thank you to Emily Beverly and Faysal Bibi for helpful comments on an early draft, John Rowan for useful suggestions regarding the most recent iteration, an anonymous reviewer for additional insights, Andrew Barr for his enthusiasm for all things bovid, and Lisa Marie Farier for background research while a Durham University undergraduate research assistant for KK.
Fieldwork in Kenya was conducted under permits issued by the Kenya National Government and the Kenya National Museum. Funding for field and laboratory work was provided by National Science Foundation (BCS-1013199 and BCS-1013108), the Leakey Foundation, the National Geographic Society's Committee for Research and Exploration (8762-10), a graduate research grant from the Geological Society of America, the University of Minnesota, Baylor University, New York University, the University of Queensland, Harvard University, and the American School of Prehistoric Research.
We thank Dr. Emma Mbua, Dr. Fredrick Manthi, Dr. Purity Kiura, and the museum staff in the Paleontology, Archaeology, and Preparation Departments of the Kenya National Museum, Nairobi. We also thank the Wakondo community and excavation team; Sheila Nightingale, Stephen Longoria, Matthew Macharwas, Julian Ogondo, Samuel Odhiambo, Lucyline Mbogori, Joshua Siembo, Adam Cosset, David Ochieng Miriga, Joseph Ochieng Oyugi, Robert Onkondoyo, Isayah Onyango, Samwel Odoyo, and William Ondongo Oyoro for their work and support for this project, and we thank Kieran McNulty and the Rusinga Miocene Research Team for logistical support in the field. Austin Jenkins and Samantha Porter assisted with formatting Figures 1 and 2, respectively. Funding to KK for the extant bovid data collection was provided by The Leverhulme Trust and the SYNTHESYS Project (http://www.synthesys.info/), which was financed by European Community Research Infrastructure Action under the FP6 “Structuring the European Research Area” Programme and the Royal Society International Joint Project.
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL
The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/qua.2020.102.