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Phylogenetic rate shifts in feeding time during the evolution of Homo

Chris Organ, Charles L. Nunn, Zarin Machanda, and Richard W. Wrangham
PNAS published ahead of print August 22, 2011 https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1107806108
Chris Organ
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Charles L. Nunn
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Zarin Machanda
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Richard W. Wrangham
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  1. Edited by Richard G. Klein, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, and approved July 26, 2011 (received for review May 17, 2011)

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Abstract

Unique among animals, humans eat a diet rich in cooked and nonthermally processed food. The ancestors of modern humans who invented food processing (including cooking) gained critical advantages in survival and fitness through increased caloric intake. However, the time and manner in which food processing became biologically significant are uncertain. Here, we assess the inferred evolutionary consequences of food processing in the human lineage by applying a Bayesian phylogenetic outlier test to a comparative dataset of feeding time in humans and nonhuman primates. We find that modern humans spend an order of magnitude less time feeding than predicted by phylogeny and body mass (4.7% vs. predicted 48% of daily activity). This result suggests that a substantial evolutionary rate change in feeding time occurred along the human branch after the human–chimpanzee split. Along this same branch, Homo erectus shows a marked reduction in molar size that is followed by a gradual, although erratic, decline in H. sapiens. We show that reduction in molar size in early Homo (H. habilis and H. rudolfensis) is explicable by phylogeny and body size alone. By contrast, the change in molar size to H. erectus, H. neanderthalensis, and H. sapiens cannot be explained by the rate of craniodental and body size evolution. Together, our results indicate that the behaviorally driven adaptations of food processing (reduced feeding time and molar size) originated after the evolution of Homo but before or concurrent with the evolution of H. erectus, which was around 1.9 Mya.

  • hominin
  • phylogenetic comparative methods
  • anthropology

Footnotes

  • ↵1To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: corgan{at}oeb.harvard.edu.
  • Author contributions: C.O., C.L.N., Z.M., and R.W.W. designed research, performed research, contributed new reagents/analytic tools, analyzed data, and 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/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1107806108/-/DCSupplemental.

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Phylogenetic rate shifts in feeding time during the evolution of Homo
Chris Organ, Charles L. Nunn, Zarin Machanda, Richard W. Wrangham
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Aug 2011, 201107806; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1107806108

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Phylogenetic rate shifts in feeding time during the evolution of Homo
Chris Organ, Charles L. Nunn, Zarin Machanda, Richard W. Wrangham
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Aug 2011, 201107806; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1107806108
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