Hominin turnover at Laetoli is associated with vegetation change: Multiproxy evidence from the large herbivore community

IF 3.1 1区 地球科学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY Journal of Human Evolution Pub Date : 2024-05-24 DOI:10.1016/j.jhevol.2024.103546
Elizabeth N. Fillion , Terry Harrison
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Abstract

Vegetation change in eastern Africa during the Pliocene would have had an important impact on hominin adaptation and ecology, and it may have been a key driver of hominin macroevolution, including the extinction of Australopithecus and the emergence of Paranthropus and Homo. The Pliocene paleoanthropological site of Laetoli in Tanzania provides an opportunity to investigate the relationship between vegetation change and hominin turnover because it encompasses the time period when grass cover was spreading across eastern Africa and because hominin species turnover occurred locally at Laetoli, with Paranthropus aethiopicus in the Upper Ndolanya Beds (UNB) replacing Australopithecus afarensis in the Upper Laetolil Beds (ULB). However, it remains unresolved how the vegetation of the UNB and the ULB differed from each other. To examine differences between the two stratigraphic units, multiple proxies—hypsodonty, mesowear, and stable carbon isotopes of tooth enamel (δ13Cenamel)—are used to infer the diets of large herbivores and compare the dietary guild structure of the large herbivore communities. All three proxies indicate an increase in the abrasiveness and C4-content in the diets of the large herbivores in the UNB relative to those in the ULB. After inferring the diets of species based on all three proxies, the large herbivore community of the UNB had a greater proportion of grazers and a smaller proportion of mixed feeders than in the ULB but maintained a similar proportion of browsers and frugivores. The ULB community has few modern-day analogs, whereas the UNB community is most closely analogous to those in modern African grasslands. Thus, hominin turnover at Laetoli is associated with an increase in grass cover within a woodland-grassland mosaic and is part of a broader transformation of the herbivore community structure.

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拉埃托利的古人类更替与植被变化有关:来自大型食草动物群落的多代证据
上新世时期非洲东部的植被变化会对类人猿的适应性和生态学产生重要影响,它可能是类人猿宏观进化的一个关键驱动因素,包括澳洲原始人的灭绝以及古人类和智人的出现。坦桑尼亚上新世古人类遗址拉埃托利(Laetoli)为研究植被变化与类人猿更替之间的关系提供了一个机会,因为它所处的时期正是草覆盖在整个非洲东部蔓延的时期,而且在拉埃托利,类人猿的物种更替发生在局部地区,上恩多拉尼亚岩床(UNB)的古人类取代了上拉埃托利岩床(ULB)的澳洲人猿。然而,UNB 和 ULB 的植被有何不同仍未解决。为了研究这两个地层单元之间的差异,研究人员使用了多种代用指标--髋臼齿、介齿和牙釉质的稳定碳同位素(δ13Cenamel)--来推断大型食草动物的食性,并比较大型食草动物群落的食性结构。这三种代用指标都表明,相对于超低海拔地区,联合国科教文组织大型食草动物食物的磨蚀性和C4含量都有所增加。根据这三种代用指标推断物种的食性后,与 ULB 相比,UNB 大型食草动物群落中食草动物的比例较大,混食动物的比例较小,但食草动物和俭食动物的比例相近。ULB群落在现代几乎没有类似的群落,而UNB群落与现代非洲草原上的群落最为相似。因此,拉埃托利的类人更替与林地-草地镶嵌中草覆盖率的增加有关,是食草动物群落结构更广泛转变的一部分。
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来源期刊
Journal of Human Evolution
Journal of Human Evolution 生物-进化生物学
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
15.60%
发文量
104
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Human Evolution concentrates on publishing the highest quality papers covering all aspects of human evolution. The central focus is aimed jointly at paleoanthropological work, covering human and primate fossils, and at comparative studies of living species, including both morphological and molecular evidence. These include descriptions of new discoveries, interpretative analyses of new and previously described material, and assessments of the phylogeny and paleobiology of primate species. Submissions should address issues and questions of broad interest in paleoanthropology.
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