Abstract

Morphological and biogeochemical evidence suggest that australopithecines had diets markedly different from those of extant great apes. Stable carbon isotope analysis, for example, has shown that significant amounts of the carbon consumed by australopithecines were derived from C 4 photosynthesis in plants. This means that australopithecines were eating large quantities of C 4 plants such as tropical grasses and sedges, or were eating animals that were themselves eating C 4 plants. In contrast, there is no evidence that modern apes consume appreciable amounts of any of these foods, even in the most arid extents of their ranges where these foods are most prevalent. Environmental reconstructions of early australopithecine environments overlap with modern chimpanzee habitats. This, in conjunction with the stable isotope evidence, suggests that australopithecines and great apes, even in similar environments, would utilize available resources differently. Thus, the desire or capacity to use C 4 foods may be a basal character of our lineage. We do not know, however, which of the nutritionally disparate C 4 foods were utilized by hominids. Here we discuss which C 4 resources were most likely consumed by australopithecines, as well as the potential nutritional, physiological, and social consequences of eating these foods.

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