Life history trade-offs explain the evolution of human pygmies
- Leverhulme Centre for Human Evolutionary Studies, University of Cambridge, The Henry Wellcome Building, Fitzwilliam Street, Cambridge CB2 1QH, United Kingdom
-
Edited by Kristen Hawkes, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, and approved November 9, 2007 (received for review August 24, 2007)
Abstract
Explanations for the evolution of human pygmies continue to be a matter of controversy, recently fuelled by the disagreements surrounding the interpretation of the fossil hominin Homo floresiensis. Traditional hypotheses assume that the small body size of human pygmies is an adaptation to special challenges, such as thermoregulation, locomotion in dense forests, or endurance against starvation. Here, we present an analysis of stature, growth, and individual fitness for a large population of Aeta and a smaller one of Batak from the Philippines and compare it with data on other pygmy groups accumulated by anthropologists for a century. The results challenge traditional explanations of human pygmy body size. We argue that human pygmy populations and adaptations evolved independently as the result of a life history tradeoff between the fertility benefits of larger body size against the costs of late growth cessation, under circumstances of significant young and adult mortality. Human pygmies do not appear to have evolved through positive selection for small stature—this was a by-product of selection for early onset of reproduction.
Footnotes
- *To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: abm25{at}cam.ac.uk
-
Author contributions: A.B.M. and M.M.L. designed research; A.B.M. performed research; A.B.M., L.V., and M.M.L. analyzed data; and A.B.M., L.V., and M.M.L. wrote the paper.
-
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
-
This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.
-
This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/0708024105/DC1.
- © 2007 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA





