An ecomorphological model of the initial hominid dispersal
from Africa
S.C. Antón, W.R. Leonard and M.L. Robertson
An ecomorphological model of the initial hominid dispersal from
Africa We use new data on the timing and extent of the early Pleistocene dispersal
of Homo erectus to estimate diffusion coefficients of early Homo from Africa.
These diffusion coefficients indicate more rapid and efficient dispersals than
those calculated for fossil Macaca sp., Theropithecus darti, and Mesopithecus
pentelicus. Increases in home range size associated with changes in ecology,
hominid body size, and possibly foraging strategy may underlay these differences
in dispersal efficiency. Ecological data for extant primates and human foragers
indicate a close relationship between body size, home range size, and diet quality.
These data predict that evolutionary changes in body size and foraging behavior
would have produced a 10-fold increase in the home range size of H. erectus
compared with that of the australopithecines. These two independent datasets
provide a means of quantifying aspects of the dispersal of early Homo and suggest
that rapid rates of dispersal appear to have been promoted by changes in foraging
strategy and body size in H. erectus facilitated by changes in ecosystem structure
during the Plio-Pleistocene.
Journal of Human Evolution
43: 773–785
(pdf)