During the Late Cretaceous, Europe was an
archipelago. Southern France and north-western Spain where its fossils are found was part of the large Ibero-Armorican island in the prehistoric
Tethys Sea. The rock formations that have yielded
Gargantuavis fossils have also produced abundant remains of fish, turtles,
crocodylomorphs, pterosaurs, various titanosaurian
sauropods (including
Ampelosaurus and
Lirainosaurus),
ankylosaurians,
ornithopods, and
theropods, including other early avialans, like
enantiornithes. The association of abundant fossils of the ornithopod
Rhabdodon, and the lack of any
hadrosaurid fossils, have been used as
index fossils to roughly date these formations to the late
Campanian-early
Maastrichtian interval, an age confirmed later by
magnetostratigraphic evidence in two localities. The type locality of
Gargantuavis, the Bellevue site in the
Marnes Rouges Inferieures Formation, is 71.5 million years old (earliest Maastrichtian). The Spanish site of Laño is slightly older with an age of 72 to 73.5 Ma (latest Campanian). Since no skull remains have been found, the diet of the animal is uncertain. Contrary to the giant terrestrial
Cenozoic birds that lived in ecosystems without predators (or including only small carnivores),
Gargantuavis cohabited with abelisaurid and
dromaeosaurid theropods, so the place of this giant terrestrial bird in the Late Cretaceous ecosystems of the Ibero-Armorican island is unclear.
Gargantuavis seems to have been an uncommon part of the fauna in its region. Despite numerous digs at sites where its bones have been found since its discovery, most have yielded only single specimens. Although its fossils are rare, the presence of
Gargantuavis from southeastern France to north-western Spain shows that this bird had a wide distribution in the Ibero-Armorican island. It is possible that
Gargantuavis lived mainly in an environment that was not compatible with fossilization, such as areas far from the rivers and
floodplains, which represent most of the fossiliferous deposits in the late Campanian-early Maastrichtian of France and Spain. Bone
histology showed that
Gargantuavis had a rapid early growth followed by an extended period (of at least 10 years) of slow cyclical growth before to attain skeletal maturity. A similar pattern is known in extinct
dinornithiformes and in the extant
kiwi, which are also insular birds. The titanosaur
Ampelosaurus, found together with
Gargantuavis in the Bellevue site, shows also a reduction in its growth rate, possibly linked to some environmental pressure like periodic food shortages. This is supported by
sedimentological and
mineralogical studies which indicate episodes of
semi-arid and strongly seasonal climate during the Late Cretaceous in Southern France. ==Classification==