The Irvingtonian Avifauna of Cumberland Bone Cave, Maryland
Author
James, Helen F.
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-05-07
4772
1
111
131
journal article
22331
10.11646/zootaxa.4772.1.4
ddb62273-2007-405c-968b-ebd41b334d22
1175-5326
3814013
FA9664B5-0439-44E0-BDFA-485CF1C2CCEF
Corvidae
, aff.
Cyanocitta
/
Perisoreus
Material.
CM
24274,
r tarsometatarsus
with damage to the hypotarsus and repair to the shaft (
Fig. 1Q
). Referred to
Perisoreus canadensis
by
Brodkorb & Mourer-Chauviré (1984)
.
USNM
PAL 641989,
r tarsometatarsus
: entire, collected in the 1990s (
Fig 1s
). A break mid-shaft has been repaired.
USNM
PAL 641990
, l tarsometatarsus: distal three-fourths, collected
July 2002
.
USNM
PAL 641991
,
r tibiotarsus
: distal half, collected
Sept. 22, 1994
.
USNM
PAL 641994
, l carpometacarpus lacking proximal end, collected
July 2002
.
Description.
These five passerine bones are recognizable as New World jays, family
Corvidae
, based on size and morphological agreement. They represent either a single species or multiple species of similar size. They cannot be assigned to any of several fossil species of North American jays of late Blancan and Irvingtonian ages (
Protocitta dixi
Brodkorb 1957
,
Protocitta ajax
Brodkorb 1972
,
Henocitta brodkorbi
Holman 1959
), which are considerably larger in body size. One of the fossil tarsometatarsi (CM 24274) has a particularly narrow shaft distally, and the tibiotarsus also has a narrow distal shaft in relationship to condyle breadth. These traits are not diagnostic to species according to the morphometric analysis described below.
Measurements
. See Appendix 1 and
Figures 2-4
.
Morphometric Analysis
. I used a morphometric approach to compare the fossils with modern species of jays from continental North America north of
Mexico
(
Canada
Jay
P. canadensis
, Blue Jay
Cyanocitta cristata
, three species of scrub jays,
Aphelocoma coerulescens
,
woodhouseii
, and
californica
, and the larger Steller’s Jay
Cyanocitta stelleri
). Bone lengths could only be taken from the fossil carpometacarpus and the two tarsometatarsi. Boxplots for these measurements illustrate differences in intermembral proportions among the taxa, with
Aphelocoma
having a long tarsometatarsus relative to carpometacarpus, and
Perisoreus
and even more so
Cyanocitta cristata
having a short tarsometatarsus relative to carpometacarpus (
Fig. 2
). For the fossils, even with the small sample size, it can be seen that if only one species of jay is present, its body proportions are not consistent with assignment to
Aphelocoma
. The fossil tarsometatarsi are also distinctly smaller than in
C. stelleri
.
FIGURE 2.
Box and whisker plots summarizing long bone lengths in North American jays. A) Carpometacarpus, length of major metacarpal (mm); B) tarsometatarsus length (mm). Data from Appendix 1.
To evaluate the fossil tibiotarsus, width of the distal shaft and width across the distal condyles were taken. The ratio of these measurements shows that the fossil tibiotarsus has an unusually slender shaft (
Fig. 3
). It agrees with
P. canadensis
in this trait although it is also within the range of
A. woodhouseii
.
Brodkorb & Mourer-Chauviré (1984)
referred the tarsometatarsus CM 24274 to
P. canadensis
based on its slender shaft. To evaluate the intramembral proportions of the two fossil tarsometatarsi, I measured tarsometatarsus length and four width measurements covering proximal and distal articular and shaft widths (Appendix 1). I performed a principal components analysis using four variables: 1) length from intercotylar area to the trochlea of the third metatarsal, 2) proximal width across articular facets, 3) proximal shaft width at level of proximal vascular foramina, 4) distal shaft width at level of distal vascular foramen (
Fig. 4
). I also ran this analysis with five variables (distal width across trochleae included), with very similar results (not shown). In the four-variable analysis, for the first principal component, the variables’ loadings had the same sign and a moderate range of values (variable 1 = -0.52, variable 2 = -0.55, variable 3 = -0.49, variable 4 = -0.44). This component, weighted most heavily on length and the proximal widths, reflects size and also some shape variance, as clearly shown by the reversal of the positions of
C. cristata
and
P. canadensis
relative to their tarsometatarsus lengths (compare
Figs. 2b
and
4
). The second principal component contrasted tarsometatarsus distal shaft width (component loading -0.80) with proximal shaft width (loading +0.48) and total length (loading +0.33). This component tended to distinguish
A. californica
and
A. woodhouseii
from the other taxa but otherwise was ineffective at separating the species. The two Cumberland Bone Cave fossils are centrally placed in the principal components biplot (
Fig. 4
). CM 24274 falls just outside the probability ellipse for
P. canadensis
, which supports Brodkorb & Mourer-Chauviré’s opinion of the bone; however, it also falls within the probability ellipse for
C. cristata
and just outside the ellipses of the three species of
Aphelo- coma
. USNM PAL 641989 falls near the center of the plot, within the ellipses for
C. cristata
and
A. coerulescens
. Considering that these are merely 68% probability ellipses, representing one standard deviation, I conclude that the tarsometatarsus data are indecisive with regard to the genus or species of jay(s) represented.
FIGURE 3.
Box and whisker plot summarizing the ratio of shaft width to distal condylar width in North American jays. Data from Appendix 1.
FIGURE 4.
Plot of the first two principal components for tarsometatarsus dimensions in North American jays. Data from Appendix 1.
Remarks.
The fossil jays received extra scrutiny because Brodkorb & Mourer-Chauviré cited their identification of
P. canadensis
as evidence that the Cumberland Bone Cave assemblage accumulated during a cold climate phase. Although the osteometric analysis eliminated
C. stelleri
on size and provisionally eliminated
Aphelocoma
on body proportions (assuming only one species is represented by the fossils), it was otherwise indecisive as to the genus and species represented.
Perisoreus canadensis
has also been reported as a fossil in another southerly location, Cheek Bend Cave in
Tennessee
(
Parmalee & Klippel 1982
). The bird and mammal assemblage from Cheek Bend Cave includes a number of boreal species and was interpreted as dating to the Last Glacial Maximum. In the case of Cumberland Bone Cave,
Perisoreus
, if present, would be the only purely boreal element in the avian assemblage (see Discussion).