Aiello Leslie C
Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, New York, New York, USA.
Am J Hum Biol. 2025 Jun;37(6):e70091. doi: 10.1002/ajhb.70091.
The Energetic Consequences of Being a Homo erectus Female was published in the American Journal of Human Biology over two decades ago. This paper drew attention to the high body-size-related reproductive costs of an H. erectus female if she retained the same reproductive schedule of smaller-bodied earlier hominins modeled on the schedule for modern Pan. The main conclusion was that the energetic cost per offspring would be significantly reduced by adopting a modern human reproductive schedule with a shorter lactation period and an overall shorter interbirth interval. To make this possible and support the energetic requirements of the larger body size, there would have had to be a fundamental shift in subsistence behavior involving a higher-quality diet and intergenerational cooperation in food acquisition. This paper re-evaluates these conclusions based on recent energetic research developments. Although the modeling parameters have changed, the conclusions are still valid. Their implications are discussed in light of modern research on the increase in body and brain size and the evolution of cooperative subsistence behavior.
《直立人女性的能量后果》于二十多年前发表在美国《人类生物学杂志》上。该论文指出,如果直立人女性保持与体型较小的早期人类相似的生殖时间表(以现代黑猩猩的时间表为模型),那么与体型相关的生殖成本就会很高。主要结论是,采用现代人类的生殖时间表,缩短哺乳期并总体缩短生育间隔,每个后代的能量成本将显著降低。为了实现这一点并支持更大体型的能量需求,生存行为必须发生根本性转变,包括更高质量的饮食以及食物获取中的代际合作。本文基于近期能量研究的进展重新评估了这些结论。尽管建模参数发生了变化,但结论仍然有效。结合现代关于身体和大脑尺寸增加以及合作生存行为进化的研究,对这些结论的意义进行了讨论。