Impact of carnivory on human development and evolution revealed by a new unifying model of weaning in mammals.

Our large brain, long life span and high fertility are key elements of human evolutionary success and are often thought to have evolved in interplay with tool use, carnivory and hunting. However, the specific impact of carnivory on human evolution, life history and development remains controversial....

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Main Authors: Elia Psouni, Axel Janke, Martin Garwicz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3329511?pdf=render
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author Elia Psouni
Axel Janke
Martin Garwicz
author_facet Elia Psouni
Axel Janke
Martin Garwicz
author_sort Elia Psouni
collection DOAJ
description Our large brain, long life span and high fertility are key elements of human evolutionary success and are often thought to have evolved in interplay with tool use, carnivory and hunting. However, the specific impact of carnivory on human evolution, life history and development remains controversial. Here we show in quantitative terms that dietary profile is a key factor influencing time to weaning across a wide taxonomic range of mammals, including humans. In a model encompassing a total of 67 species and genera from 12 mammalian orders, adult brain mass and two dichotomous variables reflecting species differences regarding limb biomechanics and dietary profile, accounted for 75.5%, 10.3% and 3.4% of variance in time to weaning, respectively, together capturing 89.2% of total variance. Crucially, carnivory predicted the time point of early weaning in humans with remarkable precision, yielding a prediction error of less than 5% with a sample of forty-six human natural fertility societies as reference. Hence, carnivory appears to provide both a necessary and sufficient explanation as to why humans wean so much earlier than the great apes. While early weaning is regarded as essentially differentiating the genus Homo from the great apes, its timing seems to be determined by the same limited set of factors in humans as in mammals in general, despite some 90 million years of evolution. Our analysis emphasizes the high degree of similarity of relative time scales in mammalian development and life history across 67 genera from 12 mammalian orders and shows that the impact of carnivory on time to weaning in humans is quantifiable, and critical. Since early weaning yields shorter interbirth intervals and higher rates of reproduction, with profound effects on population dynamics, our findings highlight the emergence of carnivory as a process fundamentally determining human evolution.
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spelling doaj.art-b2acc942237b44ae930672141f31e02e2022-12-22T03:10:40ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0174e3245210.1371/journal.pone.0032452Impact of carnivory on human development and evolution revealed by a new unifying model of weaning in mammals.Elia PsouniAxel JankeMartin GarwiczOur large brain, long life span and high fertility are key elements of human evolutionary success and are often thought to have evolved in interplay with tool use, carnivory and hunting. However, the specific impact of carnivory on human evolution, life history and development remains controversial. Here we show in quantitative terms that dietary profile is a key factor influencing time to weaning across a wide taxonomic range of mammals, including humans. In a model encompassing a total of 67 species and genera from 12 mammalian orders, adult brain mass and two dichotomous variables reflecting species differences regarding limb biomechanics and dietary profile, accounted for 75.5%, 10.3% and 3.4% of variance in time to weaning, respectively, together capturing 89.2% of total variance. Crucially, carnivory predicted the time point of early weaning in humans with remarkable precision, yielding a prediction error of less than 5% with a sample of forty-six human natural fertility societies as reference. Hence, carnivory appears to provide both a necessary and sufficient explanation as to why humans wean so much earlier than the great apes. While early weaning is regarded as essentially differentiating the genus Homo from the great apes, its timing seems to be determined by the same limited set of factors in humans as in mammals in general, despite some 90 million years of evolution. Our analysis emphasizes the high degree of similarity of relative time scales in mammalian development and life history across 67 genera from 12 mammalian orders and shows that the impact of carnivory on time to weaning in humans is quantifiable, and critical. Since early weaning yields shorter interbirth intervals and higher rates of reproduction, with profound effects on population dynamics, our findings highlight the emergence of carnivory as a process fundamentally determining human evolution.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3329511?pdf=render
spellingShingle Elia Psouni
Axel Janke
Martin Garwicz
Impact of carnivory on human development and evolution revealed by a new unifying model of weaning in mammals.
PLoS ONE
title Impact of carnivory on human development and evolution revealed by a new unifying model of weaning in mammals.
title_full Impact of carnivory on human development and evolution revealed by a new unifying model of weaning in mammals.
title_fullStr Impact of carnivory on human development and evolution revealed by a new unifying model of weaning in mammals.
title_full_unstemmed Impact of carnivory on human development and evolution revealed by a new unifying model of weaning in mammals.
title_short Impact of carnivory on human development and evolution revealed by a new unifying model of weaning in mammals.
title_sort impact of carnivory on human development and evolution revealed by a new unifying model of weaning in mammals
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3329511?pdf=render
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AT martingarwicz impactofcarnivoryonhumandevelopmentandevolutionrevealedbyanewunifyingmodelofweaninginmammals