Early hominids may have been weed species
- PMID: 29358388
- PMCID: PMC5819451
- DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1719669115
Early hominids may have been weed species
Abstract
Panid, gorillid, and hominid social structures appear to have diverged as dramatically as did their locomotor patterns as they emerged from a late Miocene last common ancestor (LCA). Despite their elimination of the sectorial canine complex and adoption of bipedality with its attendant removal of their ready access to the arboreal canopy, Australopithecus was able to easily invade novel habitats after florescence from its likely ancestral genus, Ardipithecus sp. Other hominoids, unable to sustain sufficient population growth, began an inexorable decline, culminating in their restriction to modern refugia. Success similar to that of earliest hominids also characterizes several species of macaques, often termed "weed species." We here review their most salient demographic features and find that a key element is irregularly elevated female survival. It is reasonable to conclude that a similar feature characterized early hominids, most likely made possible by the adoption of social monogamy. Reduced female mortality is a more probable key to early hominid success than a reduction in birth space, which would have been physiologically more difficult.
Keywords: Australopithecus; chimpanzee; hominin; macaques; primate biodemography.
Conflict of interest statement
Conflict of interest statement: R.S.M. (author) and A.C.S. (reviewer) shared authorship of an encyclopedia entry during the past 48 mo.
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