Andalusian researchers, led by the University of Granada, have discovered a curious characteristic of the members of the human lineage, classed as the genus Homo: they are the only
primates1 where, throughout their 2.5-million year history, the size of their teeth has decreased in
tandem2 with the increase in their brain size. The key to this phenomenon, which scientists call "
evolutionary3 paradox," could be in how Homo's diet has evolved.
Digestion4 starts first in the mouth and, so, teeth are essential in breaking food down into smaller pieces. Therefore, the normal
scenario5 would be that, if the brain grows in size, and, hence, the body's
metabolic6 needs, so should teeth.
However, in the case of Homo, this has not been the case, according to scientists in an article recently published in the journal BioMed Research International. The main author of the study, researcher Juan Manuel Jimenez
Arenas7, from the University of Granada's Department of Pre-History and
Archaeology8, points out that, "This means that significant changes must have occurred in order to maintain this trend."
A change in diet, incorporating a higher amount of animal food, must have been one of the keys to this phenomenon. The quality leap in Homo's diet, through a greater
intake9 in animal proteins, fats and certain olio-elements, is essential for a correct working and maintenance of the brain. On a similar note, a larger brain allows greater social and cultural development, which, at that time, led to the achievement of important
technological10 innovations.
In order to
validate11 this theory, the researchers evaluated the relationship between the size of post-canine teeth and the volume of the endocranium in a wide set of primates, among which were found the main representatives of Homo fossils. "Before we started the study, it was well known that, throughout the evolution of humans, tooth-size diminished and brain-size increased. We have established that they are two opposing evolutionary trends that have been linked for 2.5 million years, when our first ancestors within the Homo genus first appeared on the evolutionary stage."