Spending a summer in Dayville,
Oregon, probably doesn’t sound like much of a career-advancing opportunity
unless you study obscure small towns or farming (or fire – we had lots of those).
It’s deep in Eastern Oregon, so deep that it’s a 30+ minute drive if you want more
than the canned beans and melted men’s deodorant the only store in town has to
offer. The population is 145, but the age distribution is akin to a teetering, inverted
triangle - I saw an order of magnitude more rattlesnakes than I did people
under the age of 35. But Dayville is home to much more than cows and near-retirement
ranchers: it has huge exposures of millions of consecutive years of
fossil-forming layers of the Cenozoic and is a 15-minute drive from the world-renowned
John Day Fossil Beds National Monument. As a paleontology doctoral student
studying Cenozoic mammals, there’s no place in the world I’d rather be located
(also, I conveniently like rattlesnakes).
My job this summer as a Geocorps
Paleontologist Intern at the John Day Fossil Beds National Monument (JODA) was
two-fold. The first part was to identify the oreodonts (superfamily
Merycoidodontoidea) in the collection and help redefine their biostratigraphy. This
was an important task: over a quarter of the cabinets of the John Day Formation
fossils here are dedicated to oreodonts, and almost none of these oreodonts had
valid identifications. For those of you familiar with this blog, oreodonts are kinda my jam, and also my bread and peanut butter - they're what I'm studying for my dissertation, and they are phenomenally important parts of North American Cenozoic ecosystems. For researchers looking at paleoecology of the park, or
for identification of future material, it's really important that there is
correctly-identified material for comparison and further research.
My second job for the
summer was to learn more about the rocks they came from and the methods that
helped extract them – I did field work once or twice a week and usually spent a
few hours a week in the lab prepping oreodonts for study. Essentially, my task
for the summer was to work on a research project closely aligned to my
dissertation topic, and to learn more about the career I am preparing to enter
(a pretty fantastic deal, if you ask me).
Eventually
though, even the expired half-and-half of life must run out and I realized that
while I had seen many, many Eporeodon
occidentalis in the collections, I had not seen a single Eucrotaphus trigonocephalus. A feeling
of unease came upon me, much like the intestinal distress probably striking all the neighborhood cats post-expired half-and-half. I had spent many weeks previous to my arrival at
different museums taking pictures of oreodont holotypes (my dissertation does
involve oreodont taxonomy and variability, after all), but though Eucrotaphus trigonocephalus was ONLY FOUND in the John Day Basin it hadn’t turned up. How, exactly, had I missed it?
I looked
at the type, and at the descriptions of my predecessors, and found that while
many of the skulls in the John Day Fossil Beds collection shared characters
with the described species, none of them looked quite like the holotype. In
fact, for every single character listed as diagnostic of Eucrotaphus trigonocephalus, I could find it in a specimen that
also had characters diagnostic of Eporeodon
occidentalis. I spent a lot of time reading about very specific portions of
bone and trying to find new characters to distinguish the two taxa. I read an
entire 17 page paper on the foramen ovale (absolutely riveting, HAHAHAHA GET IT RIVETS ARE ALSO HOLES).
In the end, my boss suggested that instead of endlessly whining that all of these morphologies weren’t discrete, I should run a phylogenetic tree on my individuals and see if they actually lumped together in any meaningful fashion. I coded 45 individuals of Eporeodon, Eucrotaphus, Promerycochoerus, Hypsiops, Merychyus, Paroreodon, Oreodontoides, Agriochoerus and Camelus, and tossed it all into Mr. Bayes like I was chumming the water for polytomous sharks. I think I may well be the only person who’s ever given a gleeful cackle and smacked their hands together at the sight of a failed phylogenetic tree, but Mr. Bayes gave me exactly what I expected: everyone else seperated and there was a gigantic polytomy of Eporeodon and Eucrotaphus.
Schrödinger's Eucrotaphus trigonocephalus? |
In the end, my boss suggested that instead of endlessly whining that all of these morphologies weren’t discrete, I should run a phylogenetic tree on my individuals and see if they actually lumped together in any meaningful fashion. I coded 45 individuals of Eporeodon, Eucrotaphus, Promerycochoerus, Hypsiops, Merychyus, Paroreodon, Oreodontoides, Agriochoerus and Camelus, and tossed it all into Mr. Bayes like I was chumming the water for polytomous sharks. I think I may well be the only person who’s ever given a gleeful cackle and smacked their hands together at the sight of a failed phylogenetic tree, but Mr. Bayes gave me exactly what I expected: everyone else seperated and there was a gigantic polytomy of Eporeodon and Eucrotaphus.
For those of you less familiar with what a polytomy is, it is the phylogenetic equivalent of a pile of unsorted vomit: it tells you that your characters fail to distinguish any evolutionary difference between the individuals in your study. In fact, even if I cut the characters I thought were variable the two taxa still lumped all together into one big mess. Combine that with the fact that the sizes were well within the range of modern variation and I was convinced: there was actually one genus, one species, not upwards of 3 genera and 10 species.
Me + Many Awesome Members of a Single Species |
Many people find taxonomy tedious and unexciting, and despite the
numerous feral cat references in the preceding paragraphs it might be easy to
find my description of the bulk of my summer similarly so. After all, what I
did with Eporeodon occidentalis is
also what I did with Promerycochoerus
superbus (3 genera and 9 species was actually just one of both). I also learned
that our species of Hypsiops is quite
likely a new species or MAYBE HAS RAMPANT ARTHRITIS, and spent a lot of time grumbling about how confusing
baby teeth were. But here is the important bit, the part that makes all the
endless irritation associated with naming things worth it: I found that there
were only 10 species of oreodonts in John Day – about a quarter of the number
that had been described from there historically. That is a tremendous drop in
perceived diversity.
Let’s put
it into Dayville terms: if I told you we had 6 different species of small
feline predator living under the Dayville Mercantile that would be incredibly
exciting. Biologists would flock to study what sort of habitat could hold 6
entirely different species of extremely similar carnivore living simultaneously. Of
course, that isn’t the case here – feral house cats and maybe a skunk or two are
all that live under Dayville’s only store. This is not a surprise, nor a
revelation – it is a pretty standard reflection of what carnivore diversity out
in Dayville should look like. Understanding how many oreodont species there
were in the John Day Basin is perhaps less exciting for modern day felid-enthusiasts,
but still fundamental for conducting other scientific pursuits: was the John
Day Fossil Beds a hotspot of herbivore diversity, or was it pretty standard?
John Day does have a pretty diverse array of snakes, though. I call this one Dramatic Racer |
It may also correlate with the opening up of habitats in the area! Different ecosystem, different species! |
This summer was an exciting adventure in taxonomy (a sentence never before uttered), but Dayville offered a lot of personal opportunities as well. I’ve spent a lot of evenings hiking or climbing in Black Canyon Wilderness area or on the monument itself. I climbed to the top of Sheep Rock up the wrong side, and came back down the correct one (with Amy!). I went backpacking with fellow Geocorps intern Gabriel Hinding and marveled at the granites of the Wallowa Mountains. I stood on Cretaceous conglomerates and talked endlessly about standing on reject dinosaur gastroliths. I collected the fossils of oreodonts, hypertragulids, gophers and mice. I got to watch helicopters carry buckets of water over my house to put out nearby fires (on multiple occasions - like I said, there was a lot of fire this year). Dayville itself, tiny, hidden town that it is has handed me some amazing rural-America cultural snapshots, from living at the back of the one store in town in a building decorated internally with shingles, to having my backyard turned into an RV park of incredibly friendly cowboys who were fake-robbing the Dayville Mercantile during the 4th of July melodrama.
I also learned what the double mic drop really looks like. |
Though I'm still pretty pissed they didn't start immediately using this photo for all of their advertisements. |
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