Henry Amanda G
Plant Foods and Hominin Dietary Ecology Research Group, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, 04103 Leipzig, Germany.
Int J Primatol. 2012 Jun;33(3):702-715. doi: 10.1007/s10764-011-9556-1. Epub 2011 Nov 18.
When reconstructing the diets of primates, researchers often rely on several well established methods, such as direct observation, studies of discarded plant parts, and analysis of macrobotanical remains in fecal matter. Most of these studies can be performed only on living primate groups, however, and the diets of extinct, subfossil, and fossil groups are known only from proxy methods. Plant microremains, tiny plant structures with distinctive morphologies, can record the exact plant foods that an individual consumed. They can be recovered from recently deceased and fossil primate samples, and can also be used to supplement traditional dietary analyses in living groups. Here I briefly introduce plant microremains, provide examples of how they have been successfully used to reconstruct the diets of humans and other species, and describe methods for their application in studies of primate dietary ecology.
在重建灵长类动物的饮食时,研究人员通常依赖几种成熟的方法,如直接观察、对丢弃的植物部分的研究以及对粪便中大型植物残骸的分析。然而,这些研究大多只能在现存的灵长类动物群体上进行,而灭绝的、亚化石和化石群体的饮食只能通过替代方法得知。植物微残骸是具有独特形态的微小植物结构,可以记录个体所食用的确切植物性食物。它们可以从最近死亡的和化石灵长类动物样本中获取,也可用于补充对现存群体的传统饮食分析。在此,我简要介绍植物微残骸,举例说明它们如何成功用于重建人类和其他物种的饮食,并描述其在灵长类动物饮食生态学研究中的应用方法。