Literature DB >> 18380863

Hominin life history: reconstruction and evolution.

Shannen L Robson1, Bernard Wood.   

Abstract

In this review we attempt to reconstruct the evolutionary history of hominin life history from extant and fossil evidence. We utilize demographic life history theory and distinguish life history variables, traits such as weaning, age at sexual maturity, and life span, from life history-related variables such as body mass, brain growth, and dental development. The latter are either linked with, or can be used to make inferences about, life history, thus providing an opportunity for estimating life history parameters in fossil taxa. We compare the life history variables of modern great apes and identify traits that are likely to be shared by the last common ancestor of Pan-Homo and those likely to be derived in hominins. All great apes exhibit slow life histories and we infer this to be true of the last common ancestor of Pan-Homo and the stem hominin. Modern human life histories are even slower, exhibiting distinctively long post-menopausal life spans and later ages at maturity, pointing to a reduction in adult mortality since the Pan-Homo split. We suggest that lower adult mortality, distinctively short interbirth intervals, and early weaning characteristic of modern humans are derived features resulting from cooperative breeding. We evaluate the fidelity of three life history-related variables, body mass, brain growth and dental development, with the life history parameters of living great apes. We found that body mass is the best predictor of great ape life history events. Brain growth trajectories and dental development and eruption are weakly related proxies and inferences from them should be made with caution. We evaluate the evidence of life history-related variables available for extinct species and find that prior to the transitional hominins there is no evidence of any hominin taxon possessing a body size, brain size or aspects of dental development much different from what we assume to be the primitive life history pattern for the Pan-Homo clade. Data for life history-related variables among the transitional hominin grade are consistent and none agrees with a modern human pattern. Aside from mean body mass, adult brain size, crown and root formation times, and the timing and sequence of dental eruption of Homo erectus are inconsistent with that of modern humans. Homo antecessor fossil material suggests a brain size similar to that of Homo erectus s. s., and crown formation times that are not yet modern, though there is some evidence of modern human-like timing of tooth formation and eruption. The body sizes, brain sizes, and dental development of Homo heidelbergensis and Homo neanderthalensis are consistent with a modern human life history but samples are too small to be certain that they have life histories within the modern human range. As more life history-related variable information for hominin species accumulates we are discovering that they can also have distinctive life histories that do not conform to any living model. At least one extinct hominin subclade, Paranthropus, has a pattern of dental life history-related variables that most likely set it apart from the life histories of both modern humans and chimpanzees.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18380863      PMCID: PMC2409099          DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-7580.2008.00867.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Anat        ISSN: 0021-8782            Impact factor:   2.610


  137 in total

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Review 2.  Inferences regarding the diet of extinct hominins: structural and functional trends in dental and mandibular morphology within the hominin clade.

Authors:  Peter W Lucas; Paul J Constantino; Bernard A Wood
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Journal:  Am J Phys Anthropol       Date:  2003-04       Impact factor: 2.868

6.  Growth processes in teeth distinguish modern humans from Homo erectus and earlier hominins.

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  74 in total

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Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-11-15       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  Innovation, life history and social networks in human evolution.

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5.  Different early rearing experiences have long-term effects on cortical organization in captive chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes).

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6.  Colloquium paper: how grandmother effects plus individual variation in frailty shape fertility and mortality: guidance from human-chimpanzee comparisons.

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Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-05-05       Impact factor: 11.205

7.  Interactions between metabolic and reproductive functions in the resumption of postpartum fecundity.

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9.  Dental development and life history in living African and Asian apes.

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Review 10.  A natural history of the human mind: tracing evolutionary changes in brain and cognition.

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Journal:  J Anat       Date:  2008-04       Impact factor: 2.610

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