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
If you live in a developed country, odds are you are going to die of a heart attack, stroke, cancer or an accident. But it was not always this way. For most of our evolutionary history as primates, one of the most common causes of death, perhaps the most common cause, was, well, being eaten.
Starting with the first primates, which evolved about 65 million years ago, our ancestors were about the size of a monkey, if not smaller. Larger apes evolved about 13 million years ago, eventually producing today’s gorillas, chimpanzees, orangutans, bonobos and us. Hominids, including our direct ancestors, split from chimps and bonobos about seven million years ago, and our own species, Homo sapiens, is only about 200,000 years old. Evidence of our historic fates comes from knowing what eats monkeys or apes today, and from studying what ate now-extinct species. For example, many of the best fossils of hominids come from piles of bones near places where predators ate lunch.
Here then are ten of the animals likely to have killed our ancient and not so ancient kin. The fact that you are alive means your direct ancestors escaped these fates, if not forever then at least long enough to reproduce.
1. Lions and tigers and leopards, oh #$*@!
Leopards are extraordinarily good at eating primates. They are stealthy. They run fast (at least faster than our ancestors). They leap powerfully (up into primates’ sleeping trees). And they can carry great weights (our bodies) to wherever it might be safe for them to pause and dine. With this combination of traits, leopards have been breathing down our necks for as long as 10 million years.
Today’s leopards show what our ancestors had to contend with. In one study in South Africa’s Kruger National Park, 70 percent of baboon deaths were attributed to African leopards. In another study, half of the mammals that leopards killed were monkeys or chimpanzees; they also kill young gorillas. When scientists pick through leopard scat, many of the bones they find are from primates—ribs, fingers, toes and skulls, all of them remarkably similar to our own skeleton. Baboons seem to get eaten by leopards at night, monkeys during the day. Scientists, on the other hand, are most likely to get eaten when they pause while picking through leopard scat to say, “Hey, I think this looks fresh!”
Primates, including humans, are also eaten by lions in Africa, tigers in the Asian tropics, and cougars and jaguars in the Americas. A single troop of chimpanzees in Tanzania had four of its members eaten by lions in just a few days in 1989. The authors of that study reported, a bit somberly, that the “responses of chimpanzees to lions included alarm calls, whimpers, climbing into trees, and silence.” We have no reason to believe our ancestors’ responses were any different.
2. The first humans to fly
I tease my neighbor because she worries about red-tailed hawks carrying off her small dog, but the truth is that not so long ago, eagles would have carried off our small children. One of the most famous hominid fossils is the skull of a 3-year-old child found in Taung, South Africa. The Taung child was a member of the Australopithecus africanus species, which lived in Africa from about three million to two million years ago. The skull has holes neatly punched into its eye sockets; they were made by the talons of a large bird akin to an African crowned eagle. The skull was found among other bones under what has been interpreted as a nest. More recently, great piles of roughly five-million-year-old fossil monkey skulls, many of them with talon holes, were discovered in Angola under what appear to have been four separate eagle nests.
Today, 90 percent or more of the prey of crowned eagles in Kibale National Park in Uganda are primates, mostly cercopithecoid monkeys. Primates are also the favorite prey of harpy eagles in the tropical forests of the Americas. Perhaps the clearest indication of just how important predation, and predation by birds in particular, is in primate evolution comes from the lexicon of monkeys. Monkeys have distinct calls for different predators. Those terms include, “cat,” “snake” and, to paraphrase, “oh crap, eagle.” “Ohcrapeagle” may well have been one of the first human words.
3. Snakes
Snakes have long influenced our fate and evolution. In parts of Africa, venomous snakebites are common, and many of those bites prove deadly. Venomous snakes aren’t the only kind that kill humans and other primates today and might have killed our ancestors—constrictors can also do a fine job. New observations by Cornell University biologist Harry Greene even suggest that in some indigenous populations today, constricting snakes may be one of the most common causes of death.
4. A primate-eat-primate world
Anthropologists have argued, variously, that early hominids were aggressive hunters, peaceful foragers, hairless swimmers, sneaky scavengers and a dozen other things. Time may or may not tell. But some of our ancestors were almost certainly food for other primates. Today, some chimpanzees are, in effect, monkeyvores. In Uganda, chimps preferentially eat red colobus monkeys, which are said to taste like chicken. In other regions, chimps prefer black and white colobus monkeys. There is, as they say, no accounting for taste. Orangutans eat gibbons. Blue monkeys eat bush babies, squirrel-size nocturnal primates. Capuchin monkeys, those adorable organ grinders, eat owl monkeys and so on. Primates eat primates, and this has long been the case.
5. Dog days
There is a reason why the author of Little Red Riding Hood chose a wolf to put in Grandma’s bed. Wolves do occasionally kill humans, particularly in parts of Eastern Europe. Deaths seem to be more likely in the spring when mothers are hunting for food for their cubs. Data are sparse, but historic predation by wolves on young humans may once have been common—common enough to influence our stories and fears.
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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