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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2016-06-06
    Description: The evolution of C4grassland ecosystems in eastern Africa has been intensely studied because of the potential influence of vegetation on mammalian evolution, including that of our own lineage, hominins. Although a handful of sparse vegetation records exists from middle and early Miocene terrestrial fossil sites, there is no comprehensive record of vegetation through the Neogene. Here we present a vegetation record spanning the Neogene and Quaternary Periods that documents the appearance and subsequent expansion of C4grasslands in eastern Africa. Carbon isotope ratios from terrestrial plant wax biomarkers deposited in marine sediments indicate constant C3vegetation from ∼24 Ma to 10 Ma, when C4grasses first appeared. From this time forward, C4vegetation increases monotonically to present, with a coherent signal between marine core sites located in the Somali Basin and the Red Sea. The response of mammalian herbivores to the appearance of C4grasses at 10 Ma is immediate, as evidenced from existing records of mammalian diets from isotopic analyses of tooth enamel. The expansion of C4vegetation in eastern Africa is broadly mirrored by increasing proportions of C4-based foods in hominin diets, beginning at 3.8 Ma inAustralopithecusand, slightly later,Kenyanthropus. This continues into the late Pleistocene inParanthropus, whereasHomomaintains a flexible diet. The biomarker vegetation record suggests the increase in open, C4grassland ecosystems over the last 10 Ma may have operated as a selection pressure for traits and behaviors inHomosuch as bipedalism, flexible diets, and complex social structure.
    Print ISSN: 0027-8424
    Electronic ISSN: 1091-6490
    Topics: Biology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General
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