• Would humans exist if apes weren't aquaphobes?

    From Paul Crowley@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jun 2 08:28:13 2022
    Apes did not have to be aquaphobes. That
    was probably quite accidental. The first apes
    (gibbon-like IMO) found themselves on an
    island surrounded by fast-flowing water. So,
    like many flightless bird species on small
    oceanic islands, there was selection against
    a near-universal ability which was likely to
    get them into trouble.

    Apes could well have evolved in another
    location, retaining the standard mammalian
    ability to swim and never acquired a fear of
    water.

    What difference would that have made for
    ape and hominin evolution?

    I doubt if it would have had much effect on
    that of apes, per se. Gibbons would not be
    as split up into so many different species,
    with few significant differences. Likewise,
    there would probably have been fewer
    fossil species of ape in Europe and Africa
    around 10-12 ma.

    But would hominins have ever evolved?
    They split from chimps when there was a
    small rise in sea-levels, or a change in the
    course of a major river, creating an off-
    shore island. If the mainland chimps could
    have swum across, that population might
    never have achieved the genetic isolation
    necessary for a new species.

    As it was, even a small body of water was
    enough to allow the (proto-)hominins to
    maintain genetic isolation. They would
    have needed a larger one before they
    started to descend from the trees and live
    on the ground. That would not have been
    possible in the presence of large mainland
    omnivores, and we can assume that a few
    individuals of those species would swim
    to visible islands from time to time.

    Did this process happen, or begin to
    happen, several times before it was finally
    successful? IMO that's just about possible
    and, if various fossil apes before the
    australopiths (e.g. Sahelanthropus, Orrorin)
    are shown to be bipedal, or other bipeds
    are found, they could have come from
    earlier proto-hominin populations. They
    would have been even more rare on the
    mainland African landscape than
    australopiths later became, and so could
    have wandered around for a while in
    relative safety. The local fauna would not
    have known what to make of them.

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  • From littoral.homo@gmail.com@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jun 2 15:53:37 2022
    Apes did not have to be aquaphobes.

    Google
    "bonobo wading",
    "gorilla bai".

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  • From I Envy JTEM@21:1/5 to Paul Crowley on Fri Jun 3 22:20:42 2022
    Paul Crowley wrote:

    Apes did not have to be aquaphobes.

    Talking about evolution, literally NOTHING had to happen. In fact,
    most species go extinct. The default is "They all die." The exception
    is "They adapted, they evolved."

    That
    was probably quite accidental. The first apes
    (gibbon-like IMO) found themselves on an
    island surrounded by fast-flowing water. So,
    like many flightless bird species on small
    oceanic islands, there was selection against
    a near-universal ability which was likely to
    get them into trouble.

    I tend to think that it happened in stages. That, going back to
    monkeys, one or more population adapted to an aquatic
    diet and then eventually moved away from it/adapted to an
    inland environment while retaining some of the aquatic
    features (adaptations).

    Look at the skeleton of a giant sauropod dinosaur. It so
    closely resembles the skeleton of the much smaller,
    bipedal dinosaurs that it evolved from that some crazy
    people thought it must've reared up on it's hind legs.

    "Law of conservation," baby! Unless there's selective
    pressure to get rid of a trait, it's just as likely to remain as
    get bred out, even if the trait evolved for a different environment/lifestyle...

    And I never believed that the "Aquatic Ape" population was
    alone on the planet. Groups were getting driven inland from
    the start -- natural disasters, competition, climate change --
    and adapting. In fact, I see this and the true engine of human
    evolution. That, thanks to the glacial/interglacial cycle, these
    separate population were cut off from each other during
    interglacials, adapting, evolving, and then during glacial periods
    their genes were getting exchanged... the best shared and
    retained by all.

    The aquatic/coastal population was the key. It was the link. It
    was the conduit through which DNA flowed between the
    continents.

    But the point is, this model has DIFFERENT and DISTINCT
    populations!

    Apes could well have evolved in another
    location, retaining the standard mammalian
    ability to swim and never acquired a fear of
    water.

    But they were an inland group. They were the ones who left the
    water, adapted to inland environments.

    What difference would that have made for
    ape and hominin evolution?

    I don't understand the question.

    But would hominins have ever evolved?
    They split from chimps when there was a
    small rise in sea-levels, or a change in the
    course of a major river, creating an off-
    shore island. If the mainland chimps could
    have swum across, that population might
    never have achieved the genetic isolation
    necessary for a new species.

    The chimps split off from us. So we would still have
    evolved but they would not have.





    -- --

    https://jtem.tumblr.com/post/686063009321336832

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  • From DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_l@21:1/5 to Paul Crowley on Sat Jun 4 06:30:52 2022
    On Thursday, June 2, 2022 at 11:28:14 AM UTC-4, Paul Crowley wrote:
    Apes did not have to be aquaphobes. That
    was probably quite accidental. The first apes
    (gibbon-like IMO) found themselves on an
    island surrounded by fast-flowing water. So,
    like many flightless bird species on small
    oceanic islands, there was selection against
    a near-universal ability which was likely to
    get them into trouble.

    Apes could well have evolved in another
    location, retaining the standard mammalian
    ability to swim and never acquired a fear of
    water.

    What difference would that have made for
    ape and hominin evolution?

    I doubt if it would have had much effect on
    that of apes, per se. Gibbons would not be
    as split up into so many different species,
    with few significant differences. Likewise,
    there would probably have been fewer
    fossil species of ape in Europe and Africa
    around 10-12 ma.

    But would hominins have ever evolved?
    They split from chimps when there was a
    small rise in sea-levels, or a change in the
    course of a major river, creating an off-
    shore island. If the mainland chimps could
    have swum across, that population might
    never have achieved the genetic isolation
    necessary for a new species.

    As it was, even a small body of water was
    enough to allow the (proto-)hominins to
    maintain genetic isolation. They would
    have needed a larger one before they
    started to descend from the trees and live
    on the ground. That would not have been
    possible in the presence of large mainland
    omnivores, and we can assume that a few
    individuals of those species would swim
    to visible islands from time to time.

    Did this process happen, or begin to
    happen, several times before it was finally
    successful? IMO that's just about possible
    and, if various fossil apes before the
    australopiths (e.g. Sahelanthropus, Orrorin)
    are shown to be bipedal, or other bipeds
    are found, they could have come from
    earlier proto-hominin populations. They
    would have been even more rare on the
    mainland African landscape than
    australopiths later became, and so could
    have wandered around for a while in
    relative safety. The local fauna would not
    have known what to make of them.


    Apes avoid water because their ancestors were islanded.
    Humans are aquatic because their ancestors were islanded.
    Double fantasy: Atlantis x Atlantis.

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  • From Paul Crowley@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jun 4 10:42:26 2022
    On Saturday 4 June 2022 at 14:30:53 UTC+1, DD'eDeN aka note/nickname/alas_my_loves wrote:

    Apes avoid water because their ancestors were islanded.

    Apes avoid water. What do YOU think is
    the reason?

    Humans are aquatic

    Humans are certainly not aquatic. They
    share with other apes the fear of water from
    birth. But most apes (especially humans)
    can, given the right conditions, learn how to
    overcome that fear and master swimming.

    because their ancestors were islanded.

    Humans (and earlier hominins) often had
    a need to swim, and many or most
    populations had members who learned
    how.

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