New Isotopic Evidence Reveals Dietary Habits of Australopithecus deyiremeda, Offering Fresh Insights into Early Hominin Ecology
A groundbreaking study published in Nature shines new light on the dietary preferences and ecological niche of Australopithecus deyiremeda, a relatively newly identified Pliocene hominin species from the Bouri region in Ethiopia. By integrating stable carbon isotope data from dental enamel with comparative fossil evidence, researchers have delineated a distinct dietary pattern that not only highlights the complex evolution of early hominin subsistence strategies but also refines our understanding of Pliocene environments.
Historically, reconstructions of hominin diet and habitat have relied heavily on morphological analyses of dental and skeletal remains, supplemented by paleontological and geological contextual data. However, these traditional approaches often provide limited resolution, especially when sample sizes are small or morphological distinctions are subtle. This study harnesses the power of stable isotope analysis, specifically the measurement of δ^13C values in tooth enamel, as a sensitive proxy for reconstructing ancient diets and distinguishing C3 from C4 plant consumption with greater precision.
The research focuses on isotopic sampling of eight A. deyiremeda teeth recovered from two key fossil localities, BRT-VP-1 and BRT-VP-2. The mean δ^13C value obtained for these specimens is −10.2 ± 1.2‰, with individual values ranging from −12.4 to −8.8‰. These values are indicative of a diet predominantly composed of C3 plant resources—typical of wooded and forested environments—rather than C4 grasses or sedges, which are associated with more open savannah landscapes.
Comparative analysis reveals that these isotopic signatures position A. deyiremeda close to other early hominins such as Australopithecus ramidus and Australopithecus anamensis, both known from eastern Africa and similarly reliant primarily on C3-based diets. Crucially, A. deyiremeda does not share the broader and more varied isotopic range seen in species such as Australopithecus afarensis and Kenyanthropus platyops, which exploited a diverse array of both C3 and C4 plant resources. This pattern corroborates morphological evidence suggesting A. deyiremeda retained primitive dietary traits.
The isotopic data are contextualized against a backdrop of other sympatric mammals from the same fossil sites. Notably, animals such as Theropithecus oswaldi and Notochoerus euilus show isotopic signatures consistent with mixed or predominantly C4 graze-based diets. The distinct dietary niche of A. deyiremeda among these contemporaneous fauna underlines niche partitioning and adaptive diversification in the region’s rich Pliocene ecosystem.
Understanding the dietary ecology of A. deyiremeda is crucial since diet reflects not only feeding behavior but also broader aspects of locomotion, social organization, and habitat utilization. The retention of a predominantly C3 diet amidst increasing environmental variability in the Pliocene suggests ecological conservatism or specialization, potentially influencing locomotor adaptations and foraging strategies of this lineage.
The findings also have broader implications for interpreting Pliocene hominin evolution in the Afar region and beyond. The stable isotope approach allows for high-resolution dietary reconstructions even with limited fossil material, opening opportunities for reevaluating ecological models of hominin diversification and their responses to environmental pressures during critical phases of human evolution.
Moreover, the clear isotopic distinction between A. deyiremeda and A. afarensis supports the hypothesis that multiple hominin species with differing ecological adaptations coexisted sympatrically during the Pliocene. This challenges simplistic linear narratives of hominin evolution and highlights a more mosaic pattern of dietary and behavioral specializations that may have driven evolutionary trajectories.
Methodologically, the study employed rigorous sampling and isotopic analysis protocols, ensuring that confounding diagenetic alterations were minimized and results are robust. The isotope data were calibrated against the internationally recognized Vienna Pee Dee Belemnite (VPDB) standard, lending further precision and comparability to the findings.
This investigation also confirms the value of integrating multi-proxy evidence—combining stable isotope data with morphological and environmental context—to reconstruct the paleoecology of extinct hominins. Such integrative approaches are increasingly vital in revealing the nuanced adaptations that shaped human ancestry.
The study’s authors highlight that while the δ^13C range of A. deyiremeda is narrow, the isotopic signatures align with dietary reliance on C3 forest plants, fruits, and possibly nuts, contrasting with more open-habitat foragers. This dietary signal corresponds well with the geological and faunal evidence indicating mixed woodland environments around BRT during the early Pliocene.
In total, this comprehensive isotopic and comparative analysis advances our understanding of early hominin dietary adaptations, suggesting that Australopithecus deyiremeda maintained a unique ecological strategy that differentiated it from coexisting species. It underscores the complex evolutionary landscape in which multiple hominin taxa evolved with varying responses to shifting climates and habitats.
Ongoing and future research based on isotopic and morphological datasets promises to further unravel the intricate ecological web of Pliocene Africa, offering fresh perspectives on how ancient hominins exploited natural resources and evolved within dynamic environments.
The robust isotopic framework presented for A. deyiremeda enriches the broader discourse on hominin evolution by illustrating the interplay between diet, environment, and evolutionary adaptation, reminding us that ancient hominins were ecologically diverse and behaviorally flexible.
By highlighting distinct dietary signatures against the background of other mammalian taxa and early hominins, this study exemplifies the power of geochemical proxies in paleontological research to reconstruct life histories of long-extinct species, drawing us closer to a detailed narrative of human origins.
Subject of Research: Dietary habits and ecological adaptations of Pliocene hominin Australopithecus deyiremeda through stable carbon isotope analysis.
Article Title: New finds shed light on diet and locomotion in Australopithecus deyiremeda.
Article References: Haile-Selassie, Y., Schwartz, G.T., Prang, T.C. et al. New finds shed light on diet and locomotion in Australopithecus deyiremeda. Nature (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09714-4
Image Credits: AI Generated
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09714-4
Tags: Australopithecus deyiremeda dietary habitsBouri region hominin discoveriesC3 and C4 plant consumptiondental enamel isotopic samplingearly hominin subsistence strategiesecological niche of early homininsfossil evidence of A. deyiremedainsights into ancient diets and habitatsisotopic evidence in paleoanthropologymorphological analysis limitations in paleoanthropologyPliocene hominin ecologystable carbon isotope analysis in hominins



