November 13, 2007

Underground Munchies: Chimps Dig ‘Em

Anthropologists working in western Tanzania recently found evidence that chimpanzees use sticks to dig up edible roots, bulbs and tubers—a behavior previously thought to be a uniquely human adaptation. (Read about other such behaviors.)

The chimps live in Ugalla, an arid woodland savanna (above). They’ve been watched by scientists involved in the Ugalla Primate Project since 1989. From May to October, the normally lush region gets extremely dry, and food becomes scarce. The environmental challenges here are very similar to those faced by humans earliest ancestors, according to the project’s researchers, whose findings appeared yesterday in the early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The researchers didn’t actually see the chimps digging. But they did find holes in the ground beneath chimpanzee “nests” (the piles of branches and leaves in trees where the animals sleep). And near the holes, they found chimp knuckle prints, feces and chewed-up wads of tubers (apparently, chimps are known for this kind of spitting.)

You’d think that digging for underground food would be an evolutionary adaptation to surviving the arid season. You’d be wrong: The researchers observed that the chimps dug only during the rainy season, when above-ground food was abundant. This surprise finding, according to head researcher James Moore, “challenges our current hypotheses about the role of such foods in hominid evolution and may help reframe the scientific debate.”

(James Moore, UCSD)

Posted By: Virginia Hughes — Anthropology, Evolution, News, Wildlife | Link | Comments (0)

August 14, 2007

You Are Short And You’re Gonna Die Soon

Americans are fond of saying that they are #1, which is the smallest number there is.

Just a heads-up, America: Not only are you shorter than the Polish, but we just found out you’re gonna die younger than folks in Jordan and pretty much everyone else–41 other countries, to be exact.

Anyone up for a quick round of mini-golf?

Posted By: Richard Morgan — Anthropology, Biology, News, People | Link | Comments (0)

July 17, 2007

Today’s Great Science Quote

I had the chance to talk to biological anthropologist Dan Lieberman of Harvard late last week for a story on the evolution of upright walking. He had a really great line I wasn’t able to work into the piece, but wanted to share.  (more…)

Posted By: Eric Jaffe — Anthropology, News | Link | Comments (0)

June 5, 2007

Polynesians Beat Europeans to the “New World”

For decades, scientists have debated how the chicken crossed the ocean. Now, a new analysis of chicken bones shows that Polynesians brought the non-native fowls to the Americas more than a century before Columbus made landfall.

Researchers in southcentral Chile worked with University of Auckland, New Zealand, scientists to make the discovery. The bones were found at a Chilean archaelogical site and analyzed using both DNA and carbon-dating. The bones were both very old (dated around A.D. 1350) and–more importantly–were a perfect DNA match with chicken bones found in Samoa, Tonga and Easter Island from the same era.  (more…)

Posted By: Jen Phillips — Anthropology, History, News, People | Link | Comments (0)

February 26, 2007

Planet — well, Forest — of the Apes

A pack of Senegalese chimps — but only the females and infants — sometimes snap off branches, chew the ends into a point, and stab holes in trees where bush babies sleep, in the hopes of skewering the morsel prey. The journal Current Biology reports 22 spear bouts in the last two years. Although they’re not good at it; just one of those 22 spearings resulted in a bush baby death. (more…)

Posted By: Richard Morgan — Anthropology, Biology, History, News | Link | Comments (0)

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