4.7 Article

The early hunting dog from Dmanisi with comments on the social behaviour in Canidae and hominins

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SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
卷 11, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-92818-4

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资金

  1. Shota Rustaveli Georgian National Science Foundation
  2. Italian Embassy in Georgia
  3. Italian Ministry for Foreign Affairs (DGPCC-V)
  4. University of Florence
  5. Spanish Agencia Estatal de Investigacion (AEI/FEDER-UE) [CGL2016-78577-P, CGL2016-80975-P, CGL2017-82654-P]
  6. Generalitat de Catalunya (CERCA Program) [GENCAT 2017SGR 859]
  7. Synthesys project [BE-TAF-5471]
  8. Generalitat de Catalunya (AGAUR, Generalitat de Catalunya) [SGR 416 GRC]

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The paper reports on the discovery of early carnivorous canid fossils at the Dmanisi site, showing highly cooperative pack-hunting features and social care towards group members. This evolved hypercarnivorous canid from East Asia has one of its earliest records in the Caucasus at Dmanisi, dispersing towards Europe and Africa in a parallel route to hominins. The altruistic behavior towards group members by early Pleistocene hominins and hunting dogs is a topic discussed in evolutionary biology for over a century.
The renowned site of Dmanisi in Georgia, southern Caucasus (ca. 1.8 Ma) yielded the earliest direct evidence of hominin presence out of Africa. In this paper, we report on the first record of a large-sized canid from this site, namely dentognathic remains, referable to a young adult individual that displays hypercarnivorous features (e.g., the reduction of the m1 metaconid and entoconid) that allow us to include these specimens in the hypodigm of the late Early Pleistocene species Canis (Xenocyon) lycaonoides. Much fossil evidence suggests that this species was a cooperative pack-hunter that, unlike other large-sized canids, was capable of social care toward kin and non-kin members of its group. This rather derived hypercarnivorous canid, which has an East Asian origin, shows one of its earliest records at Dmanisi in the Caucasus, at the gates of Europe. Interestingly, its dispersal from Asia to Europe and Africa followed a parallel route to that of hominins, but in the opposite direction. Hominins and hunting dogs, both recorded in Dmanisi at the beginning of their dispersal across the Old World, are the only two Early Pleistocene mammal species with proved altruistic behaviour towards their group members, an issue discussed over more than one century in evolutionary biology.

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