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Human Ecology | 1987

The Wild Yam Question: How Well Could Independent Hunter-Gatherers Live in a Tropical Rain Forest Ecosystem?

Thomas N. Headland

It has been generally assumed until recently that tropical rain forests are food-rich biomes for human foragers, and that prehistoric hunter-gatherers once lived completely independent of cultivated foods in such environments. An alternative hypothesis that such forests are actually food-poor for humans is proposed here. Specifically, that wild starch foods such as yams were so scarce and so hard to extract that human foragers could not have lived in such biomes without recourse to cultivated foods. The symbiotic relationship found today between tropical forest hunter-gatherers and farmers is not a recent phenomenon, but evolved long ago as an adaptive strategy for successfully exploiting the tropical forest.


Human Ecology | 1991

The tropical rain forest: Is it a productive environment for human foragers?

Robert C. Bailey; Thomas N. Headland

A recent debate in ecological anthropology concerns the availability of wild foods for human foragers in tropical forests. This article is a response to the five essays in this same issue of Human Ecology that examine the hypothesis that hunter-gatherers could never have lived in tropical rain forest without direct or indirect access to cultivated foods. We clarify the hypothesis and assess the evidence offered to date. Archeological evidence suggests foraging without cultivation in Malaysia. We propose a program of ecological studies and archeological research which, if undertaken, should provide the evidence necessary to falsify the hypothesis.


Human Ecology | 1991

Introduction: have hunter-gatherers ever lived in tropical rain forest independently of agriculture?

Thomas N. Headland; Robert C. Bailey

It has often been assumed that peoples living today as foragers in tropical rain forests are remnants of paleolithic populations that have been subsisting in their forest habitats for millennia and have only recently come into contact with sources of domesticated plants and animals. Independently, the two of us have published articles that challenge this view and propose the hypothesis that hunter- gatherers could never have lived in tropical rain forest without direct or indirect access to cultivated foods. This article serves as an introduction to six articles in this issue of Human Ecology, all devoted to this hypothesis. To provide background for this journals readers, we summarize here our original articles.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Hunter–gatherers and other primates as prey, predators, and competitors of snakes

Thomas N. Headland; Harry W. Greene

Relationships between primates and snakes are of widespread interest from anthropological, psychological, and evolutionary perspectives, but surprisingly, little is known about the dangers that serpents have posed to people with prehistoric lifestyles and nonhuman primates. Here, we report ethnographic observations of 120 Philippine Agta Negritos when they were still preliterate hunter–gatherers, among whom 26% of adult males had survived predation attempts by reticulated pythons. Six fatal attacks occurred between 1934 and 1973. Agta ate pythons as well as deer, wild pigs, and monkeys, which are also eaten by pythons, and therefore, the two species were reciprocally prey, predators, and potential competitors. Natural history data document snake predation on tree shrews and 26 species of nonhuman primates as well as many species of primates approaching, mobbing, killing, and sometimes eating snakes. These findings, interpreted within the context of snake and primate phylogenies, corroborate the hypothesis that complex ecological interactions have long characterized our shared evolutionary history.


American Journal of Human Biology | 1989

Population decline in a Philippine Negrito hunter-gatherer society.

Thomas N. Headland

The Casiguran Agta constitute a Negrito hunter‐gatherer society in northeastern Luzon. The hypothesis presented is that this population has suffered serious decline over the last half ‐century. Demographic data collected over a 24‐year period are used to substantiate this hypothesis. Agta figures on crude death rate, rate of natural decrease, infant mortality, life expectancy at birth, and homicide are among the most extreme known for any human population. Reasons for this decline are described, with emphasis on the factor of homicide.


Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2018

Greater wealth inequality, less polygyny: rethinking the polygyny threshold model

Cody T. Ross; Monique Borgerhoff Mulder; Seung-Yun Oh; Samuel Bowles; Bret Beheim; John A. Bunce; Mark Caudell; Gregory Clark; Heidi Colleran; Carmen Cortez; Patricia Draper; Russell Greaves; Michael Gurven; Thomas N. Headland; Janet D. Headland; Kim Hill; Barry S. Hewlett; Hillard Kaplan; Jeremy Koster; Karen L. Kramer; Frank W. Marlowe; Richard McElreath; David Nolin; Marsha B. Quinlan; Robert J. Quinlan; Caissa Revilla-Minaya; Brooke Scelza; Ryan Schacht; Mary Shenk; Ray Uehara

Monogamy appears to have become the predominant human mating system with the emergence of highly unequal agricultural populations that replaced relatively egalitarian horticultural populations, challenging the conventional idea—based on the polygyny threshold model—that polygyny should be positively associated with wealth inequality. To address this polygyny paradox, we generalize the standard polygyny threshold model to a mutual mate choice model predicting the fraction of women married polygynously. We then demonstrate two conditions that are jointly sufficient to make monogamy the predominant marriage form, even in highly unequal societies. We assess if these conditions are satisfied using individual-level data from 29 human populations. Our analysis shows that with the shift to stratified agricultural economies: (i) the population frequency of relatively poor individuals increased, increasing wealth inequality, but decreasing the frequency of individuals with sufficient wealth to secure polygynous marriage, and (ii) diminishing marginal fitness returns to additional wives prevent extremely wealthy men from obtaining as many wives as their relative wealth would otherwise predict. These conditions jointly lead to a high population-level frequency of monogamy.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Male Facial Appearance and Offspring Mortality in Two Traditional Societies.

Lynda G. Boothroyd; Alan W. Gray; Thomas N. Headland; Ray Uehara; David Waynforth; D. Michael Burt; Nicholas Pound

It has been hypothesised that facial traits such as masculinity and a healthy appearance may indicate heritable qualities in males (e.g. immunocompetence) and that, consequently, female preferences for such traits may function to increase offspring viability and health. However, the putative link between paternal facial features and offspring health has not previously been tested empirically in humans. Here we present data from two traditional societies with little or no access to modern medicine and family planning technologies. Data on offspring number and offspring survival were analysed for the Agta of the Philippines and the Maya of Belize, and archive facial photographs were assessed by observers for attractiveness and masculinity. While there was no association between attractiveness and offspring survival in either population, a quadratic relationship was observed between masculinity and offspring survival in both populations, such that intermediate levels of masculinity were associated with the lowest offspring mortality, with both high and low levels of masculinity being associated with increased mortality. Neither attractiveness nor masculinity were related to fertility (offspring number) in either population. We consider how these data may or may not reconcile with current theories of female preferences for masculinity in male faces and argue that further research and replication in other traditional societies should be a key priority for the field.


Journal of Ecology | 1997

Tropical deforestation : the human dimension

Leslie E. Sponsel; Thomas N. Headland; Robert C. Bailey

While many studies of tropical deforestation neglect the indigenous people of the forests, this book illuminates the insights local people have into conservation of their ecosystems, the effects of habitation on those ecosystems, and the impact of development and natural resource depletion on their lives. The authors present fresh perspectives on deforestation from a wide range of fields including biological ecology, forest history, conservation biology, anthropology, political economy, and development economics. The book covers Central and South America, Africa, the Philippines, Indonesia, and the Indian subcontinent.


The Journal of Asian Studies | 1991

Emics and Etics the Insider/Outsider Debate

Thomas N. Headland; Kenneth L. Pike; Marvin Harris


BioScience | 1998

Tropical Deforestation: The Human Dimension

Charles R. Clement; Leslie E. Sponsel; Thomas N. Headland; Robert C. Bailey

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Brooke Scelza

University of California

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