The Top Ten Deadliest Animals of Our Evolutionary Past
Humans may be near the top of the food chain now, but who were our ancestors’ biggest predators?
- By Rob Dunn
- Smithsonian.com, June 21, 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
6. Nothing to laugh about
Spotted hyenas regularly prey on baboons and, in some regions, people. In the 1950s, hyenas ate 27 people in Malawi. But the real primate eaters are hyenas’ extinct relatives. As many as 100 hyena species have existed alongside primates. Many of those hyenas were big, mean brutes, including the short-faced hyena, Pachycrocuta, which was the size of a lion. It lived from three million to 500,000 years ago alongside the first hominids, such as Australopithecus, and more recent species in our lineage. It had a mouth capable of fully enveloping a hominid’s head, which it did. A treasure trove of skulls of “Peking man” (Homo erectus) found in China prior to World War II appears to have been from the waste pile of a Pachycrocuta.
7. Extinct monsters
Some of the most ferocious animals that once ate our kind are unlike any predators we contend with today. Even when they are reconstructed in museum exhibits, they appear more imaginary than real: giant hyenas, as mentioned, but also giant bears (Agriotherium), saber-toothed cats (Homotherium, Machairodus, Megantereon) and “false” saber-toothed cats (Dinofelis). In Australia, the first aboriginal colonists would have encountered giant, predatory kangaroos. Whether those roos proved deadly, we do not know. But imagine being chased by a giant hopping animal with six-inch-long teeth. Saber-toothed cats used their teeth to cut flesh, like pulling barbecue off a rib. In all likelihood, that flesh would have included that of our ancestors and kin, though the only evidence of their effects is from a single hominid skull bearing two holes, one for each saber.
8. Dragons, sharks and other local specialties
As Homo sapiens moved around the world, some of us ended up on lush islands with abundant fruit and no predators. Others ended up in the Komodo Islands, alongside Komodo dragons. These monitor lizards, weighing as much as 300 pounds, sometimes eat people, even today, especially tourists. Locals are said to have learned to avoid the monitors, but one imagines that this involved trial and—fatal—error. Many predators may have had big effects on human populations in specific regions, even if they did not affect our species’ fate more generally. For people who live near the sea, sharks have left their mark. In some regions, swimming is avoided for the simple reasons that swimmers get eaten. People in the Arctic are constantly on guard against polar bears. There were many different ways to be eaten by a predator, a true measure of earth’s biodiversity of claws and teeth.
9. In cold blood
Orangutan researchers Birute Galdikas and Carey Yeager were working in Indonesia when they observed a kind of crocodile in action. “At approximately 0730 h a false gavial shot from the water, grasped the macaque’s back, and, with the monkey in its jaws, resubmerged,” they wrote. “Some macaques vocalized immediately afterwards, and the victim’s nearest neighbor ran about 5 m away from the river edge.” This moment may have been a kind of reenactment of earlier such events, with slightly different protagonists (sometimes African crocodiles and humans, for example). Galdikas thinks that predation by gavials may account for a learned wariness of water among crab-eating macaques. Proboscis monkeys are also eaten by crocodilians.
Our ancestors had to worry about crocodilians, too. A new species of extinct crocodile was recently found in Kenya’s Olduvai Gorge, where many hominid fossils have been collected. It was named Crocodylus anthropophagus. “Anthropophagus” means human- or hominid-eating, and it earned the name in part because skeletons of both Homo habilis and Australopithecus bosiei were discovered not far from the crocodile bones. The skeletons bear the marks of what appear to be crocodile teeth and are missing their left feet.
10. The deadly now
The species listed so far were some of the most likely agents of our demise during our distant evolutionary history. As human populations grew and developed new technologies, predators became more rare because we killed them or ate their other prey. Eventually, a new “most deadly animal” emerged: the mosquito. Malaria, yellow fever and dengue, among other mosquito-borne diseases, evolved with agriculture and the expansion of civilization. Billions of humans have died because of mosquitoes, influencing our genes and even our behavior.
Even where we have beaten back our ancestral predators, we bear their mark. Our brains are wired for fight and flight because of predators. We are anxious. We readily fear what used to threaten us, such as snakes. We are who we were, but more so than that, we are what we wanted to escape. Our first words may have been uttered to warn our family of cats, snakes or eagles. Even our screams, those wordless sounds we make when we are afraid, are an echo of the ghosts of our pasts. Whether we notice or not, our bodies remember those days in which the wolf in Grandma’s bed may really have been a wolf; they remember the species we ran from, screaming as we tried to flee.
Rob Dunn is a biologist at North Carolina State University. His new book, The Wild Life of Our Bodies, is being published this week. It tells the stories of our changing relationships with other species (be they worms, bacteria or tigers). In doing so, it considers questions such as what our appendix does, why we suffer anxiety, why human babies tend to be born at night and whether tapeworms are good for us, all from an ecological perspective.
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Comments (7)
Predation ceased to be a serious factor for us about the time hominids became top predators themselves.
Judging by the emergence of the modern human body plan (which is specialized to support the hunting strategy of a cursorial pack hunter; we're the best long-distance runners among mammals) about 1.5-2 million years ago.
I've personally met one man who killed a lion with a knife; I've met more than one who've killed lions with spears. Humans are social predators, and a dozen men with spears are more than enough to see off predators, generally. Especially when you factor in the use of fire, also something that's been around for a very long time.
The most dangerous animals to pre-firearm humans weren't predators; the big herbivores like elephants and hippos are much more deadly. The fact that they don't eat you after they kill you is a very cold consolation.
The others were primarily dangerous to children or people rendered helpless by accidents.
Posted by S.M. Stirling on March 25,2012 | 01:01 AM
What about humans as predators of other humans? Might they have been in the top 10?
Posted by ceb on August 20,2011 | 09:05 PM
Leopards did not exist 10 MYA. The earliest biting cats evolved 10.6 MYA, long before the earliest ancestor of Jaguars, Lions, & Leopards evolved around 4 MYA, in Eurasia. There were however extremely large sabre tooths - Machirodonts from at least 12 MYA. One recently discovered species which lived in Chad at the time of Sahelanthropus apparently exceeded 1100 Lbs. Another Machirodont in the area was Lion sized. Machirodonts were certainly contemporary with Ardipithecus & Australopithecus.
Posted by Roger Cohn on July 3,2011 | 11:30 PM
I have personally been chased down and attacked while snowmobiling by coyotes while there were very strong poplulations in our area. I don't see why starving wolves would be any different.
Posted by David on July 2,2011 | 12:07 PM
Regarding predation on humans by wolves, I experimentally typed that into google and wikipedia is helpful http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolf_attacks_on_humans
Posted by arbitrary on July 1,2011 | 10:33 AM
1)I'm curious how many documented cases of wild jaguars (new world) eating humans there are.
5)I'm curious how many documented cases of wolves eating humans there are....and how many 'non-Eastern European' cases there are.
Posted by Mark LaRoux on June 29,2011 | 11:44 AM
Studies I have read previously all cite a lack of hard evidence for any predation on humans by wolves. Do you have any facts, apart from hearsay and folklore, which indicate otherwise? If so, please elaborate. Thanks.
Posted by Nathan-Andrew Leaflight on June 27,2011 | 01:27 PM