Department of Zoology, Faculty of Science, University of South Bohemia, Branišovská 31, 370 05 České Budĕjovice, Czech Republic.
J Hum Evol. 2013 Oct;65(4):424-46. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2013.07.009. Epub 2013 Aug 24.
The origin of the fundamental behavioral differences between humans and our closest living relatives is one of the central issues of evolutionary anthropology. The prominent, chimpanzee-based referential model of early hominin behavior has recently been challenged on the basis of broad multispecies comparisons and newly discovered fossil evidence. Here, we argue that while behavioral data on extant great apes are extremely relevant for reconstruction of ancestral behaviors, these behaviors should be reconstructed trait by trait using formal phylogenetic methods. Using the widely accepted hominoid phylogenetic tree, we perform a series of character optimization analyses using 65 selected life-history and behavioral characters for all extant hominid species. This analysis allows us to reconstruct the character states of the last common ancestors of Hominoidea, Hominidae, and the chimpanzee-human last common ancestor. Our analyses demonstrate that many fundamental behavioral and life-history attributes of hominids (including humans) are evidently ancient and likely inherited from the common ancestor of all hominids. However, numerous behaviors present in extant great apes represent their own terminal autapomorphies (both uniquely derived and homoplastic). Any evolutionary model that uses a single extant species to explain behavioral evolution of early hominins is therefore of limited use. In contrast, phylogenetic reconstruction of ancestral states is able to provide a detailed suite of behavioral, ecological and life-history characters for each hypothetical ancestor. The living great apes therefore play an important role for the confident identification of the traits found in the chimpanzee-human last common ancestor, some of which are likely to represent behaviors of the fossil hominins.
人类与我们最亲近的亲属之间基本行为差异的起源是进化人类学的核心问题之一。最近,基于广泛的多物种比较和新发现的化石证据,早期人类行为的以黑猩猩为基础的参考模型受到了挑战。在这里,我们认为,虽然现生大猿的行为数据对于重建祖先行为非常重要,但这些行为应该使用正式的系统发育方法逐个特征进行重建。我们使用广泛接受的人科系统发育树,对所有现生人科物种的 65 个选定的生活史和行为特征进行了一系列特征优化分析。该分析使我们能够重建人科、人科和黑猩猩-人类最后共同祖先的最后共同祖先的特征状态。我们的分析表明,许多人科(包括人类)的基本行为和生活史属性显然是古老的,可能是从所有人科的共同祖先继承而来的。然而,现存的许多大猿行为代表了它们自己的末端特化(既独特衍生又同源)。因此,任何使用单一现存物种来解释早期人类行为进化的进化模型都有其局限性。相比之下,祖先状态的系统发育重建能够为每个假设的祖先提供详细的行为、生态和生活史特征组合。现存的大猿因此在确定在黑猩猩-人类最后共同祖先中发现的特征方面发挥着重要作用,其中一些特征可能代表了化石人类的行为。