Obstetrical Constraints and the Origin of Extended Postnatal Brain Maturation in Hominin Evolution

Author:

Frémondière Pierre12,Haeusler Martin3ORCID,Thollon Lionel4,Webb Nicole M.35,Marchal François2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Medical and Paramedical Sciences, School of Midwifery, Aix Marseille University, 51 Boulevard Pierre Dramard, 13344 Marseille CEDEX 15, France

2. UMR 7268 ADES, Aix Marseille University, EFS, CNRS, 51 Boulevard Pierre Dramard, 13344 Marseille CEDEX 15, France

3. Institute of Evolutionary Medicine, University of Zürich, Winterthurerstrasse 190, 8057 Zürich, Switzerland

4. LBA, Aix Marseille University, Gustave Eiffel University, 51 Boulevard Pierre Dramard, 13344 Marseille CEDEX 15, France

5. Department of Palaeoanthropology, Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung, Senckenberganlage 25, 60325 Frankfurt am Main, Germany

Abstract

The origin of difficult birth is still a matter of debate in obstetrics. Recent studies hypothesized that early hominins already experienced obstructed labor even with reduced neonatal head sizes. The aim of this work is to test this hypothesis using an extant obstetrical sample with known delivery outcomes. Three delivery outcomes (i.e., instrument-assisted, Caesarean section, and vaginal birth) were evaluated using a discriminant analysis based on 131 mother–baby dyads and 36 feto-pelvic variables. This obstetrical sample was compared with 20 australopithecine “dyads” generated from the combination of six pelvic reconstructions (three for Australopithecus afarensis, two for A. africanus, and one for A. sediba) and three fetal head size estimations. The obstetrical analysis revealed that dystocic births can be predicted by pelvic features such as an anteroposteriorly flattened pelvic inlet. Australopithecines shared these pelvic morphologies with humans and had eutocic birth only for infants of 110 g brain size or smaller, equaling a human-like neonatal/adult brain size ratio of 25–28%. Although birth mechanism cannot be deduced, the newborn/adult brain size ratio was likely more human-like than previously thought, suggesting that australopithecines were secondarily altricial to circumvent instances of obstructed labor and subsequently require a prolonged postnatal brain growth period, implying some aspects of life history pattern similar to modern humans.

Funder

Leibniz Cooperative Excellence

Swiss National Science Foundation

CNRS/INEE Grant INR Bipedal equilibrium

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference59 articles.

1. Toward a life history of the Hominidae;Smith;Annu. Rev. Anthropol.,1995

2. Perinatal life history traits in New World monkeys;Hartwig;Am. J. Primatol.,1996

3. Primate Milk: Proximate mechanisms and ultimate perspectives;Hinde;Evol. Anthropol.,2011

4. Die Tragzeiten der Primaten und die Dauer der Schwangerschaft beim Menschen: Ein Problem der vergleichenden Biologie;Portmann;Rev. Suisse Zool.,1941

5. Martin, R.D. (1982, January 27). Human brain evolution in an ecological context. Proceedings of the 52nd James Arthur Lecture on the Evolution of the Human Brain; American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY, USA.

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