These findings enhance our understanding of Permian diets, paleoecological interactions, and even the microenvironments within feces!

Full text as preprint: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18978067

or final published peer-reviewed paper:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palwor.2025.201060

#Science #Paleoecology #Microfossils #PermianLife

Questions or thoughts? Drop them below! 👇

Preprint: Paleoecological insights from coprolites and their inclusions from the Permian Rio do Rasto Formation, Brazil

Coprolites have provided valuable insights into paleoecological relationships, such as predation and parasitism, as well as taphonomic and paleoenvironmental conditions. However, few studies have focused on coprolites from the Rio do Rasto Formation, despite their abundance in this formation. Here, we analyze and describe 97 coprolites from 11 sites within the Rio do Rasto Formation (middle/upper Permian) of Paraná Basin (southern Brazil). External and internal features were examined, classifying the material into four morphotypes: heteropolar (12%), amphipolar (11%), indeterminate spiral (40%) and non-spiral (37%). Alimentary inclusions, such as fish scales, teeth, bone fragments, plants and insect wing, were identified in nearly all specimens. Additionally, microorganisms and parasites were preserved within the fecal matrix, including bacilli bacteria, Actinomycete biofilm, fungal hyphae and spores, Nostocales and Chroococcales cyanobacteria, and cestode eggs. The bacteria and fungi originated from the intestinal tract of the producer before the extrusion, while the cyanobacteria were ingested from the water where these animals lived in. The new occurrence of cestode eggs provide direct evidence of parasitism and corroborates the existence of this relationship from at least the Permian. The phosphatic composition of the coprolites, combined with bacterial and fungal activity, was crucial for preserving delicate organic remains (e.g., plant and insect wing) and organisms (e.g., parasites). These findings enhance our understanding of the producer diet, paleoecological interactions, and the microenvironment within the feces.

Zenodo
📖 Further reading: The study underlines the need to re-examine the #paleoecology of these fascinating #arthropods and that additional discoveries like Polonolimulus may led to further revisions in our understanding of the #habitat and early #diversification of this group. Full paper can be found here in #OpenAccess for everyone to read: https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.20950 #fossils #paleobiology #paleontology #evolution
How DNA in dirt is shaking up the study of human origins

Researchers are pulling clues from genetic material in ice age soils and rewriting chapters of human history.

#Paleoecology of #Doggerland
A study of DNA preserved in the sediments of a river system in the now-inundated Doggerland landmass in #NorthSea finds evidence suggesting the presence of temperate tree species in Doggerland around 16,000 years ago, earlier than they appeared in surrounding European forests. The findings suggest that Doggerland may have been a favorable environment for the development of #Mesolithic societies, according to the authors. https://www.pnas.org/doi/full/10.1073/pnas.2508402123 #science
The arrival and sustained presence of early human ancestors (Homo erectus) in the prehistoric Southeast Asian landmass of Sundaland approximately 1.8 million years ago likely triggered an evolutionary shift in Leucosphyrus mosquitoes, causing them to adapt to feeding on human blood.
#EvolutionaryBiology #Paleoecology #Entomology #Epidemiology #sflorg
https://www.sflorg.com/2026/03/ebio03052601.html
Arrival of Homo Erectus may have triggered Mosquitoes’ taste for human blood

The findings could provide critical insight into mitigating the impacts of novel diseases caused by mosquito-borne pathogens

#Plant #biodiversity significantly declined in Europe following the massive human population loss and subsequent agricultural abandonment caused by the Black Death.
#Paleoecology #Ecology #Environmental #Conservation #sflorg
https://www.sflorg.com/2026/03/eco03052601.html
Black Death ‘Rewilding’ Did Not Boost Biodiversity

Many modern environmental theories suggest that human activity is inherently damaging to biodiversity,

Interesting article, in a way that the results seem to me simultaneously kind of obvious, and perspective changing.

Revisiting Europe's temperate forests: Palaeoecological evidence for an herbivory-driven woodland-grassland mosaic biome
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2026.111749

#paleoecology #forests #Europe

The #prehistoric extinction of large #herbivorous #megafauna in Panama resulted in cascading ecological disruptions, specifically an increase in regional wildfires and a significant decline in plant species reliant on massive animals for seed dispersal.
#Paleoecology #ConservationBiology #Geosciences #EarthScience #sflorg
https://www.sflorg.com/2026/03/es03032601.html
Rewilding could fill gap left by Panama's lost giants

Introducing large herbivores in Panama's forests could fill the gap left by extinct species

RE: https://helmholtz.social/@awi/116018286937061853

Our recent publication featured in @awi news! 🔥
Full paper currently available as in press here: https://www.nature.com/articles/s43247-025-03169-1
Will share more on it once the final version is online!

@paleofire @wildfirescience @ecology #siberia #wildfire #paleoecology

Might as well do an #introduction post as it has been a while...

Hello there Fediverse! I am an environmental archaeologist interested in how past communities interacted with and shaped their environments (and vice versa). Just finished my #PhD (Physical #Geography at #Plymouth) focusing on the #HumberheadLevels. For my thesis, I combined #pollen analysis, #GIS, and #geoarchaeology to understand relationships between people and #wetland #landscapes. I recently passed my viva, so I am currently looking for work.

My published work thus far includes contributions on land cover reconstruction in complex wetland systems and chapters on #anarchist approaches to #archaeology and #heritage practice. I have a few more pieces in the works, and little time to do them all.

As far as research goes, I have been mostly interested in challenging the 'pristine #nature vs human impact' binary, the politics of how we interpret past landscapes, and unpicking what we actually mean when we talk about 'natural' environments and the messy reality of human-environment coevolution.

Reviving this account to catch up with your lovely faces and to see what's happening in #archaeology #paleoecology #gis #wetlands #politicalecology and related fields. 💗

#introductions #postdoc