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The broiler chicken as a signal of a human reconfigured biosphere

Author:
Bennett, Carys E.  Thomas, Richard  Williams, Mark  Zalasiewicz, Jan  Edgeworth, Matt  Miller, Holly  Coles, Ben  Foster, Alison  Burton, Emily J.  Marume, Upenyu  


Journal:
ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE


Issue Date:
2018


Abstract(summary):

Changing patterns of human resource use and consumption have profoundly impacted the Earth's biosphere. Until now, no individual taxa have been suggested as distinc and characteristic new morphaspecies representing this change. Here we show that the domestic broiler chicken is one such potential marker. Human-directed changes in breeding, diet and farming practices demonstrate at least a doubling in body size from the late medieval period to the present in domesticated chickens, and an up to fivefold increase in body mass since the mid-twentieth century. Moreover, the skeletal morphology, pathology, bone geochemistry and genetics of modern broilers are demonstrably different to those of their. ancestors. Physical and numerical changes to chickens in the second half of the twentieth century, i.e. during the putative Anthropocene Epoch, have been the most dramatic, with large increases in individual bird growth rate and population sizes. Broiler chickens, now unable to survive without human intervention, have a combined mass exceeding that of all other birds on Earth; this novel morphotype symbolizes the unprecedented human reconfiguration of the Earth's biosphere.


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