Optimal Foraging and Hominid Evolution: Labor and Reciprocity

We argue that cooperative foraging incorporating information exchange may have preceded tool use during the course of hominid evolution. In moving to the savanna, early hominids must have faced increasingly dispersed but sometimes more profitable food sources. The problem is finding such foods. Search costs can be reduced for each individual if a number of foragers cooperate by ranging over different parts of the habitat and by exchanging information about encountered food items. Given the probability of encountering a given food item and the return per individual for that item, it is possible to specify the optimal group size. Thus, in the patchy savanna environment, selection would have favored increased gregariousness and cooperation on the part of early hominids, setting the stage for the emergence of reciprocal exchanges of information and resources. However, such a system of reciprocity is open to manipulation. Outside the foraging context, the tension between reciprocity and manipulation would shape other social interactions. Communication and information exchange may have been more critical than labor and technology in evolving hominids from hominoids. Human sociality may find its origins in a shift in primate foraging tactics.

[1]  P. Andrews,et al.  The environment of Ramapithecus in Africa , 1979, Paleobiology.

[2]  Irven DeVore,et al.  Man the Hunter , 1972 .

[3]  C. Jolly The seed-eaters : a new model of hominid differentiation based on a baboon analogy , 1970 .

[4]  S. Strum 8. Processes and Products of Change: Baboon Predatory Behavior at Gilgil, Kenya , 1981 .

[5]  K. Hill,et al.  Hunting and human evolution , 1982 .

[6]  G. Schaller The Serengeti Lion: A Study of Predator-Prey Relations , 1972 .

[7]  Friedrich Engels The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State , 2021, Politics and Kinship.

[8]  P. Rodman,et al.  Inclusive Fitness and Group Size with a Reconsideration of Group Sizes in Lions and Wolves , 1981, The American Naturalist.

[9]  W. Schaffer A Note on the Theory of Reciprocal Altruism , 1978, The American Naturalist.

[10]  James N. McNair,et al.  Optimal Giving-Up Times and the Marginal Value Theorem , 1982, The American Naturalist.

[11]  Gaulin S.J.C.,et al.  On the natural diet of primates, including humans. , 1977 .

[12]  W. Hamilton,et al.  Defensive stoning by baboons , 1975, Nature.

[13]  S. Beckerman Optimal Foraging Group Size for a Human Population: The Case of Bari Fishing , 1983 .

[14]  L. Lefebvre Food exchange strategies in an infant chimpanzee , 1982 .

[15]  W. Hamilton,et al.  The Evolution of Cooperation , 1984 .

[16]  David P. Barash,et al.  Sociobiology and Behavior , 1978 .

[17]  K. Hawkes,et al.  why hunters gather: optimal foraging and the Aché of eastern Paraguay , 1982 .

[18]  G. Schaller,et al.  SOUTHWESTERN JOURNAL OF ANTHROPOLOGY , 2012 .

[19]  Henry T. Bunn,et al.  Archaeological evidence for meat-eating by Plio-Pleistocene hominids from Koobi Fora and Olduvai Gorge , 1981, Nature.

[20]  R. Wrangham The behavioural ecology of chimpanzees in Gombe National Park, Tanzania , 1975 .

[21]  C. R. Peters,et al.  Wild plant foods of the Makapansgat area: A modern ecosystems analogue for Australopithecus africanus adaptations , 1981 .

[22]  Graham H. Pyke,et al.  Optimal Foraging: A Selective Review of Theory and Tests , 1977, The Quarterly Review of Biology.

[23]  R. Bell A grazing ecosystem in the Serengeti , 1971 .

[24]  C. Busse,et al.  Do Chimpanzees Hunt Cooperatively? , 1978, The American Naturalist.

[25]  M. Cody Finch flocks in the Mohave desert. , 1971, Theoretical population biology.

[26]  Bruce Winterhalder,et al.  Hunter-gatherer foraging strategies : ethnographic and archeological analyses , 1983 .

[27]  T. Ingold,et al.  Omnivorous primates : gathering and hunting in human evolution , 1982 .

[28]  G. G. Gallup,et al.  Self‐awareness and the emergence of mind in primates , 1982, American journal of primatology.

[29]  James F. Wittenberger Animal Social Behavior , 1981 .

[30]  R. Trivers The Evolution of Reciprocal Altruism , 1971, The Quarterly Review of Biology.

[31]  S. Gaulin A Jarman/Bell model of primate feeding niches , 1979 .

[32]  M. Hixon Energy Maximizers and Time Minimizers: Theory and Reality , 1982, The American Naturalist.

[33]  M. Sahlins Stone Age Economics , 2020 .

[34]  Christophe Boesch,et al.  Sex differences in the use of natural hammers by wild chimpanzees: A preliminary report , 1981 .

[35]  P. Rodman,et al.  Bioenergetics and the origin of hominid bipedalism. , 1980, American journal of physical anthropology.

[36]  R. Potts,et al.  Cutmarks made by stone tools on bones from Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania , 1981, Nature.

[37]  Geza Teleki,et al.  Chimpanzee subsistence technology: Materials and skills , 1974 .

[38]  Noam Chomsky Reflections on Language. , 1977 .

[39]  B. Beck Animal Tool Behavior: The Use and Manufacture of Tools by Animals , 1980 .

[40]  S. Washburn,et al.  Tools and human evolution. , 1960, Scientific American.

[41]  Kenneth S. Norris,et al.  Are Dolphins Reciprocal Altruists? , 1982, The American Naturalist.

[42]  E. Wilson Sociobiology: The New Synthesis , 1976 .

[43]  S. I. Rothstein Reciprocal altruism and kin selection are not clearly separable phenomena. , 1980, Journal of theoretical biology.

[44]  R. Dawkins,et al.  Animal signals: information or manipulation? , 1978 .

[45]  Richard B. Lee The !Kung San: Men, Women and Work in a Foraging Society , 1979 .

[46]  R. F. Kay The Nut-Crackers - A New Theory of the Adaptations of the Ramapithecinae , 1981 .

[47]  J. Hirshleifer Natural economy versus political economy , 1978 .

[48]  E. Charnov Optimal foraging, the marginal value theorem. , 1976, Theoretical population biology.

[49]  Hans Kruuk,et al.  The Spotted Hyena: A Study of Predation and Social Behavior , 1972 .

[50]  D. Rumbaugh,et al.  Do apes use language , 1980 .

[51]  G. King Alternative uses of primates and carnivores in the reconstruction of early hominid behavior , 1980 .

[52]  T D White,et al.  Evolutionary Implications of Pliocene Hominid Footprints , 1980, Science.

[53]  R. Macarthur,et al.  On Optimal Use of a Patchy Environment , 1966, The American Naturalist.

[54]  F. Szalay Hunting-Scavenging Protohominids: A Model for Hominid Origins , 1975 .

[55]  C. Darwin The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex: INDEX , 1871 .

[56]  G. Isaac,et al.  3. To What Extent Were Early Hominids Carnivorous? An Archaeological Perspective , 1981 .

[57]  A. Behrensmeyer,et al.  Fossils in the Making , 1981 .

[58]  J. Krebs,et al.  The Survival Value of Flocking in Birds: A Simulation Model , 1974 .

[59]  R W Newman,et al.  Why man is such a sweaty and thirsty naked animal: a speculative review. , 1970, Human biology.

[60]  M. Rose The roots of primate predatory behavior , 1978 .

[61]  L L Klein,et al.  Observations on two types of neotropical primate intertaxa associations. , 1973, American journal of physical anthropology.

[62]  E. Menzel,et al.  Communication about the environment in a group of young chimpanzees. , 1971, Folia primatologica; international journal of primatology.

[63]  Bruce Winterhalder,et al.  Optimal foraging strategies and hunter-gatherer research in anthropology: Theory and models , 1981 .

[64]  T. Schoener Theory of Feeding Strategies , 1971 .