Energetic consequences of being a Homo erectus female

被引:135
作者
Aiello, LC [1 ]
Key, C [1 ]
机构
[1] UCL, Dept Anthropol, London WC1E 6BT, England
关键词
D O I
10.1002/ajhb.10069
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 [人类学];
摘要
Body size is one of the most important characteristics of any animal because it affects a range of behavioral, ecological, and physiological traits including energy requirements, choice of food, reproductive strategies, predation risk, range size, and locomotor style. This article focuses on the implications of being large bodied for Homo erectus females, estimated to have been over 50% heavier than average australopithecine females. The energy requirements of these hominins are modeled using data on activity patterns, body mass, and life history from living primates. Particular attention is given to the inferred energetic costs of reproduction for Homo erectus females based on chimpanzee and human reproductive scheduling. Daily energy requirements during gestation and lactation would have been significantly higher for Homo erectus females, as would total energetic cost per offspring if the australopithecines and Homo erectus had similar reproductive schedules (gestation and lactation lengths and interbirth intervals). Shortening the interbirth interval could considerably reduce the costs per offspring to Homo erectus and have the added advantage of increasing reproductive output. The mother would, however, incur additional daily costs of caring for the dependent offspring. If Homo erectus females adopted this reproductive strategy, it would necessarily imply a revolution in the way in which females obtained and utilized energy to support their increased energetic requirements. This transformation is likely to have occurred on several levels involving cooperative economic division of labor, locomotor energetics, menopause, organ size, and other physiological mechanisms for reducing the energetic load on females. (C) 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:551 / 565
页数:15
相关论文
共 93 条
[1]
Aiello L.C., 1996, MODELLING EARLY HUMA, P89
[2]
CRANIAL VARIABLES AS PREDICTORS OF HOMININE BODY-MASS [J].
AIELLO, LC ;
WOOD, BA .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY, 1994, 95 (04) :409-426
[3]
NEOCORTEX SIZE, GROUP-SIZE, AND THE EVOLUTION OF LANGUAGE [J].
AIELLO, LC ;
DUNBAR, RIM .
CURRENT ANTHROPOLOGY, 1993, 34 (02) :184-193
[4]
Brains and guts in human evolution: The expensive tissue hypothesis [J].
Aiello, LC .
BRAZILIAN JOURNAL OF GENETICS, 1997, 20 (01) :141-148
[5]
Aiello LC, 1998, MEM CALIF ACAD SCI, P21
[6]
THE EXPENSIVE-TISSUE HYPOTHESIS - THE BRAIN AND THE DIGESTIVE-SYSTEM IN HUMAN AND PRIMATE EVOLUTION [J].
AIELLO, LC ;
WHEELER, P .
CURRENT ANTHROPOLOGY, 1995, 36 (02) :199-221
[7]
AIELLO LC, 1998, SCI ARCHAEOLOGY AGEN, P25
[8]
Parenting and survival in anthropoid primates: Caretakers live longer [J].
Allman, J ;
Rosin, A ;
Kumar, R ;
Hasenstaub, A .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1998, 95 (12) :6866-6869
[9]
Brains, maturation times, and parenting [J].
Allman, J ;
Hasenstaub, A .
NEUROBIOLOGY OF AGING, 1999, 20 (04) :447-454
[10]
Altmann J., 1980, BABOON MOTHERS INFAN