A lineage perspective on hominin taxonomy and evolution

Jesse M. Martin, A. B. Leece, Stephanie E. Baker, Andy I.R. Herries, David S. Strait

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

An uncritical reliance on the phylogenetic species concept has led paleoanthropologists to become increasingly typological in their delimitation of new species in the hominin fossil record. As a practical matter, this approach identifies species as diagnosably distinct groups of fossils that share a unique suite of morphological characters but, ontologically, a species is a metapopulation lineage segment that extends from initial divergence to eventual extinction or subsequent speciation. Working from first principles of species concept theory, it is clear that a reliance on morphological diagnosabilty will systematically overestimate species diversity in the fossil record; because morphology can evolve within a lineage segment, it follows that early and late populations of the same species can be diagnosably distinct from each other. We suggest that a combination of morphology and chronology provides a more robust test of the single-species null hypothesis than morphology alone.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere22018
JournalEvolutionary Anthropology
Volume33
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2024

Keywords

  • australopith
  • Homo
  • paleoanthropology
  • species concept
  • subspecies

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Anthropology

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