Lucy and other members of the early hominid species Australopithecus afarensis probably were similar to humans in the size difference between males and females, according to researchers from Penn State and Kent State University. "Previous convention in the field was that there were high levels of dimorphism in the Australopithecus afarensis population," said Philip Reno, assistant professor of
anthropology1, Penn State. "Males were thought to be much larger than females." Sexual dimorphism refers to differences between males and females of a species. These can show up, for example, in body size and weight or in the size of the
canine2 teeth. For Australopithecines,
canines3 of males and females are about the same size, but it was assumed their body sizes differed. Other
primates4 have varying degrees of sexual dimorphism.
Gorillas5 are highly dimorphic, with males weighing as much as 200 pounds more than females. Chimpanzees are only moderately sexually dimorphic with males weighing about 18 pounds more than females on average. Humans are moderately sexually dimorphic.
Previously6, researchers assumed that A. afarensis was similar to or even more dimorphic than gorillas in sexual size differences.
Lucy is probably the most famous example of A. afarensis, a supposed female who measures 3.5 feet in height. Also often used as an example of this species is A.L. 128/129, another small
specimen7 assumed to be female. However, A. afarensis existed long before brains in the human line became large enough to require the
alteration8 in the pelvic structure that both allows for large-headed baby births and easy identification of female
specimens9. "There is no reason why Lucy, if female, would have the wide
notched10 pelvic bone of a human female," said Reno. "We can't really sex Australopithecines."
While Lucy may not be female, she is the earliest discovered and most well preserved example of A. afarensis and so has been used as a model for the study of other specimens. Recently, another reasonably intact A. afarensis, Kadanuumuu, was uncovered and he stood 5 to 5.5 feet tall. Reno and C. Owen Lovejoy,
distinguished11 professor of human
evolutionary12 studies, Kent State, developed the Template Method to compare different skeletons and determine the range and dimorphism of A. afarensis. They report their results in the April 28th issue of PeerJ.
The pair used both Lucy and Kadanuumuu as templates for the method, which compares similar parts of the skeleton from partial
remains13 to the nearly complete remains of the template. For example, the researchers compared the size of 41 specimens from different parts of the skeleton to that of Lucy. By determining the ratio of these specimens to Lucy, they could then calculate the relative size of partial bones from incomplete skeletons and better determine the size variation in the species.
Another method of determining sexual dimorphism is the Geometric Mean Method, which uses 11 characteristics to estimate size. Unfortunately, in this method, because Lucy is so complete a skeleton, she supplies seven or eight of the metrics; A.L. 128/129 supplies an additional three. So two very small individuals supply ten of the eleven metrics.