Strait Suzanne G
Department of Biological Sciences, Marshall University, 1 John Marshall Drive, Huntington, WV 25755, USA.
J Hum Evol. 2014 Jun;71:87-93. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2014.02.013. Epub 2014 Mar 18.
An increasing body of data supports the concept that early humans ate invertebrate prey items, especially insects, and that insects may have been a substantial protein source. Insects are ubiquitous throughout the landscape and of high nutritional value. Given that all modern apes and many human groups eat insects, it is likely that early hominins did as well. However, it is unknown how much, which type(s), and what foraging strategy was utilized to obtain invertebrate prey. Given that gross masticatory anatomy of early hominins, like modern apes, fails to reflect their insectivorous proclivities, dental microwear analysis might be a useful tool for identifying this behavior in our fossil ancestors. Dental microwear data was collected on three primarily myrmecophagous mammals and compared to the literature on other faunivorous, frugivorous, and folivorous species. Results indicate that myrmecophagous species have comparable pit frequencies with other faunivores and pit frequency generally distinguishes them from folivores but not all frugivores. Additionally, myrmecophagous mammals have unusually high feature densities, like other faunivores, and density is the microwear signal most suggestive of some sort of faunivory.
越来越多的数据支持这样一种观点,即早期人类食用无脊椎动物猎物,尤其是昆虫,而且昆虫可能是一种重要的蛋白质来源。昆虫在整个环境中无处不在且营养价值很高。鉴于所有现代猿类和许多人类群体都食用昆虫,早期原始人类很可能也如此。然而,尚不清楚获取无脊椎动物猎物的量有多少、是哪些种类以及采用了何种觅食策略。鉴于早期原始人类的总体咀嚼解剖结构与现代猿类一样,未能反映出它们的食虫倾向,牙齿微磨损分析可能是识别我们化石祖先这种行为的有用工具。收集了三种主要食蚁哺乳动物的牙齿微磨损数据,并与其他食肉类、食果类和食叶类物种的文献进行了比较。结果表明,食蚁物种与其他食肉类动物的凹坑频率相当,凹坑频率通常能将它们与食叶类动物区分开来,但不能将它们与所有食果类动物区分开来。此外,食蚁哺乳动物具有异常高的特征密度,与其他食肉类动物一样,而且密度是最能表明某种食肉类习性的微磨损信号。