| Literature DB >> 20127307 |
Abstract
During the last century, approximately 30 hypotheses have been constructed to explain the evolution of the human upright posture and locomotion. The most important and recent ones are discussed here. Meanwhile, it has been established that all main hypotheses published until the last decade of the past century are outdated, at least with respect to some of their main ideas: Firstly, they were focused on only one cause for the evolution of bipedality, whereas the evolutionary process was much more complex. Secondly, they were all placed into a savannah scenario. During the 1990s, the fossil record allowed the reconstruction of emerging bipedalism more precisely in a forested habitat (e.g., as reported by Clarke and Tobias (Science 269:521-524, 1995) and WoldeGabriel et al. (Nature 412:175-178, 2001)). Moreover, the fossil remains revealed increasing evidence that this part of human evolution took place in a more humid environment than previously assumed. The Amphibian Generalist Theory, presented first in the year 2000, suggests that bipedalism began in a wooded habitat. The forests were not far from a shore, where our early ancestor, along with its arboreal habits, walked and waded in shallow water finding rich food with little investment. In contrast to all other theories, wading behaviour not only triggers an upright posture, but also forces the individual to maintain this position and to walk bipedally. So far, this is the only scenario suitable to overcome the considerable anatomical and functional threshold from quadrupedalism to bipedalism. This is consistent with paleoanthropological findings and with functional anatomy as well as with energetic calculations, and not least, with evolutionary psychology. The new synthesis presented here is able to harmonise many of the hitherto competing theories.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20127307 PMCID: PMC2819487 DOI: 10.1007/s00114-009-0637-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Naturwissenschaften ISSN: 0028-1042
Fig. 1Phyletic diagram of apes and Homo comprising the last 20 Ma, with several fossils that appear in the text (changed after Sénut 2003). To the author's conviction, only the semiterrestrial ancestors of the human lineage are older than indicated here (see text)
Fig. 4a Long-tailed macaque (also crab-eating monkey, M. fascicularis) female standing bipedally in the water and eating food retrieved from the ground. b Proboscis monkey (N. larvatus) wading bipedally. c Hanuman langurs (S. entellus) in Nepal, wading bipedally while collecting algae in a stream during the dry period. d Savannah baboons (P. cynocephalus) wading bipedally while picking flowers as food. e Chimpanzee (P. troglodytes) female wading bipedally with her infant drinking from her breast. All pictures are redrawn from photographs or films (see text and Table 1 for sources)
Fig. 2Baboon mother (Papio anubis) with infant riding on her back. In case of danger, the female baboon can escape with similar velocity as if without a riding offspring. Also note the limb proportions and the horizontal spine (cf. text)
Fig. 3The molar teeth of a macaque (a M. nemestrina) are suitable for processing a great variety of food. Those of orang-utan (b M. nemestrina) or of gorilla (c M. nemestrina) are rather derived and specialized showing enamel ridges in order to break plant fibers (b), or they are massive and pointed to shred hard plant materials like wood (c). Besides new evolutionary acquisitions, the teeth of human beings (d H. sapiens) are much more conservative in many respects as they lack many specializations. No indications exist that these generalized functional features are secondary. It is much more likely that the basal anatomy of human teeth, like that of the intestinal tract, still resembles in several aspects that of an ancestral ecological generalist. The teeth of the macaque (a) may serve as a more or less appropriate model
Old World monkey and ape species and their ecological or behavioural relationship to a shore or water in the wild (except for dependence from drinking water)
| Species | Relationship to shore or water (habitat, food, etc.) | Bipedal when in water (●) | Reference(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Crab-eating monkey; long-tailed macaque ( | Costal, mangrove, swamp and riverine forest, uses all kinds of resources on the shore an in the water (engl. name!) 'bathing culture' | ● | Pfeiffer (film, personal communication)b, own observation |
| 2. Japanese macaque ( | Eats snails, crayfish and fish, 'bathing culture', uses geo-thermal ponds, etc. | ● | Watanabe |
| 3. Rhesus monkey ( | Swamp, swimming in the wild and in zoos | Lindberg 1971a; O'Neilla,b | |
| 4. Pig-tailed macaque ( | Swamp, eats river crabs, foraging for food in shallow water | ● |
b, Rowell |
| 5. Toque macaque ( | Gallery forest near permanent water; mother carrying an infant forages in the water for food while wading and swimming; diving with the infant riding on her back | ● |
b, Rowell |
| 6. Barbary macaque ( | ...Eat tadpoles from streams | b | |
| 7. Yellow baboon ( | Forage for water plants in shallow water during the dry season | ● | Cowlishaw and Clutton-Brock |
| 8. Chacma baboon ( | ...Near the sea eats crabs, mussels and limpets. | film, b | |
| 9. Mandrill ( | Gallery and coastal forest; eats frogs and crabs | b | |
| 10. White-collared mangabey ( | Swamp and mangrove; | Grzimeck 1972a,b | |
| 11. Sooty mangabey ( | Flooded and dry swamp, mangrove and gallery forest | b | |
| 12. Grey-cheeked mangabey ( | Flooded forest | b | |
| 13. Black mangabey ( | Swamp and gallery forest | b | |
| 14. Allen's swamp monkey ( | Swamp; swimming in the wild and in zoos; eats worms and snails and catches fish | Gilbow 1985a, Forney 1985a, Wolfheim 1983a. b, Rowell | |
| 15. Talapoin ( | Wet gallery, mangrove and swamp forests; swimming in the wild, riverine species | Kavanagh 1983a: Novak | |
| 16. Vervet ( | In mangrove habitats eating mainly fiddler crabs; never far from water and often on banks of water courses | Fedigan and Fedigan | |
| 17. Red-tailed guenon ( | Gallery forest and swamp; associate with Allen's swamp monkeys | b | |
| 18. Moustached guenon ( | Gallery and flooded forest | b | |
| 19. Mona monkey ( | Riparian forest | b | |
| 20. De Brazza's monkey ( | Swamp; swimming in captivity, ecologically bound to shores of rivers and streams | Bournea; Matthews and Matthews 2002 | |
| 21. Greater spot-nosed guenon ( | Flooded forest | b | |
| 22. Lesser spot-nosed guenon ( | Coastal swamp, and scrub forest near rivers | b | |
| 23. Sclater's guenon ( | Swamp, riverine forest | b | |
| 24. Wolf's guenon ( | Swamp forest | b | |
| 25. Guereza ( | Riverine forest, foraging for food in the water | ● | film |
| 26. Western red colobus ( | Gallery forest | b | |
| 27. Pennant's red colobus ( | Swamp, gallery forest | b | |
| 28. Preuss's red colobus ( | Primary forests near water | b | |
| 29. Tana river red colobus ( | Evergreen gallery forest | b | |
| 30. Olive colobus ( | Swamps | b | |
| 31. Banded leaf monkey ( | Swamp and mangrove forest | Brandon-Jones | |
| 32. Mentawai leaf monkey ( | Swamp and mangrove forest | Brandon-Jones | |
| 33. Pale-thighed leaf monkey ( | Swamp forest | Brandon-Jones | |
| 34. Mitered leaf monkey ( | Swamp forest | Brandon-Jones | |
| 35. Hanuman langur ( | Foraging for food in the water during the dry season | ● | Nikolei |
| 36. Hooded black langur ( | Riverine forest | Brandon-Jones | |
| 37. Capped leaf monkey ( | Swamp | Brandon-Jones | |
| 38. Silvered leaf monkey ( | Coastal, mangrove and riverine forest | Kavanagh 1983a,b | |
| 39. Golden langur ( | Riverine habitat | b | |
| 40. Phayre's leaf monkey ( | Bamboo forest along hillsides and streams | b | |
| 41. Purple-faced leaf monkey ( | Riverine, coastal scub | b | |
| 42. Proboscis monkey ( | Coastal nipah palm, mangrove, lowland riverine and peat swamp; wading and swimming; diving, if a bird of prey appears, can swim underwater for 20 m | ● | Bearder |
| 43. Pig-tailed langur ( | Swamp forest | b | |
| 44. Agile gibbon ( | Prefers dry ground forest but also uses swamp forest | b | |
| 45. Sumatran orangutan ( | Lowland swamp to montane forest | b | |
| 46. Bornean orangutan ( | Lowland swamp to upland forest; wades and (rarely) swims, catches fish for food (by slaying it using a self-made club) | ● | Schuster et al. |
| 47. Western gorilla ( | Swamp; bathes and wades in waters feeding on water plants, probes water depth while wading with a self-made stick | ● |
b, films, Breuer et al. |
| 48. Common chimpanzee ( | Mother carries her infant drinking from her breast, while wading; a male picks up a mussel from the ground of a fresh water stream and eats it | ● | Salisbury |
| 49. Pygmy chimpanzee, bonobo ( | Catch fish or crabs in streams | ● | Badrian and Malenky |
Because of scanty place in the table, nonwater habitats or resources are not mentioned, as well as quantities
49 out of 108 primate species described, corresponds to 45%
Other sources are indicated
film documented by film in the wild
aAccording to Ellis 1991
bAccording to Rowe 1996
Fig. 5Bornean orangutan (P. pygmaeus) hunting fish as food. The adult female is standing bipedally in hip-deep water near the steep shore holding onto a dead branch. In the situation shown, the prey was slain using a self-made club; the dead fish was picked from the water and eaten (Foto: Ullal)
Fig. 6a At an angle of view of about 45°, two objects on the ground of a shallow water are noticed easily. b At an angle of about 35°, the objects are hardly to be seen. Hence, a higher position of the head may be of positive selective value (cf. text)
Fig. 7Thermographic pictures of a a macaque (M. fuscata), b a pygmy chimpanzee (bonobo, Pan paniscus), c and d human beings. Besides their faces, both nonhuman primates have rather warm (orange and red) limbs, especially, however, the lower ones indicating that both primate species thermoregulate with these skin surfaces. In humans, the lower abdomen and the hind limbs are insulated well by a subcutaneous fatty layer. Human thermoregulatory surfaces are face, neck, shoulder, and the upper thoracic region. The evolutionary acquisition of this marked anatomical difference preconditions the need of our ancestors to insulate only the lower limbs and abdomen. To the author’s knowledge, no other cause is probable but a wading habit of the prehuman antecedents in the African waters (thermograms by Thomas Zimmermann, Thermographisches Institut Berlin)