Department of Anthropology, University of California, Davis, CA 95616;
Department of Cell Biology & Anatomy, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB T2N 4N1, Canada.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 Aug 22;114(34):9050-9055. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1702586114. Epub 2017 Jul 24.
Agricultural foods and technologies are thought to have eased the mechanical demands of diet-how often or how hard one had to chew-in human populations worldwide. Some evidence suggests correspondingly worldwide changes in skull shape and form across the agricultural transition, although these changes have proved difficult to characterize at a global scale. Here, adapting a quantitative genetics mixed model for complex phenotypes, we quantify the influence of diet on global human skull shape and form. We detect modest directional differences between foragers and farmers. The effects are consistent with softer diets in preindustrial farming groups and are most pronounced and reliably directional when the farming class is limited to dairying populations. Diet effect magnitudes are relatively small, affirming the primary role of neutral evolutionary processes-genetic drift, mutation, and gene flow structured by population history and migrations-in shaping diversity in the human skull. The results also bring an additional perspective to the paradox of why , particularly agriculturalists, appear to be relatively well suited to efficient (high-leverage) chewing.
农业食品和技术被认为减轻了全球人类饮食的机械需求——人们需要咀嚼的频率或力度。有证据表明,在农业转型过程中,全球范围内的头骨形状和形态发生了相应的变化,尽管这些变化很难在全球范围内进行描述。在这里,我们通过适应一种用于复杂表型的定量遗传学混合模型,来量化饮食对全球人类头骨形状和形态的影响。我们在觅食者和农民之间发现了适度的定向差异。这些影响与工业化前农业群体中较软的饮食一致,而且当农业群体仅限于乳牛种群时,这些影响最为明显和可靠。饮食影响的幅度相对较小,这证实了中性进化过程(遗传漂变、突变和由种群历史和迁徙构成的基因流)在塑造人类头骨多样性方面的主要作用。研究结果还为一个悖论提供了另一个视角,即为什么特别是农民似乎特别适合高效(高杠杆)咀嚼。