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NSF PR 04-139 - October 04, 2004

Media contact: Cheryl Dybas, NSF  (703) 292-7734 cdybas@nsf.gov
Program contact: Carter Kimsey, NSF  (703) 292-8400 ckimsey@nsf.gov




Head Lice Study Supports Direct Contact Between Modern and Archaic Humans

  wooden nit comb, plastic counterpart and a human head louse
Battling an ancient enemy. The picture shows a 6th century wooden nit comb from the Egyptian city of Antinoe, alongside its modern plastic counterpart. Inset is a close-up of a human head louse.
Credit: Photograph of Egyptian comb used with permission from Te Papa, Wellington, New Zealand. Close-up courtesy Vince Smith, University of Glasgow.
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(Size: 149KB), or download a high-resolution TIF version of image (3681KB)
 
  a human head louse
An enlarged image of a human head louse.
Credit: Vince Smith, University of Glasgow
Select image for larger version
(Size: 251KB), or download a high-resolution TIF version of image (2000KB)
 
  Larger versions of all images from this document
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Arlington, Va.— New research showing that lice evolve with the people they infest demonstrates that a now-extinct species of human, Homo erectus, came into direct contact with modern humans, Homo sapiens. That contact happened as recently as 25,000 years ago.

Evidence of contact between the two species of humans is surprising, scientists say, because researchers long had thought that Homo erectus became extinct hundreds of thousands of years ago.

The study's findings appear in the Oct. 5 online issue of the Public Library of Science journal, PloS, Biology.

People today have two distinct types of head lice: one that evolved on Homo erectus, and one that evolved on Homo sapiens. The only way that could have happened, say scientists, is by direct contact between the two species.

"It's amazing to know that we had physical contact with another species of human," said David Reed, curator of mammals at University of Florida's (UF) Florida Museum of Natural History and the lead scientist on the study. "We touched them, and that's pretty dramatic to think about. We either battled with them, or lived with them or perhaps even mated with them," he said.

Scientists already believed that early ancestors of our species diverged from other archaic humans about 1.2 million years ago. Reed's study shows that two nearly identical but genetically different strains of head lice diverged at about the same time. Each of the two kinds of head lice infested a different species of early human as the human species diverged, Reed and colleagues propose.

"This research pioneers the use of parasites to tell us about the natural history of humans and other animals," said Carter Kimsey, program director in the National Science Foundation (NSF)'s division of biological infrastructure, which co-funded the research with NSF’s division of environmental biology. It gives biologists and anthropologists a new tool, said Kimsey.

"We've discovered the ‘smoking louse’ that reveals direct contact between two early species of humans, probably in Asia about 25,000 to 30,000 years ago," said co-author Dale Clayton of the University of Utah. Other authors of the paper include Alan Rogers of the University of Utah, Vincent Smith of the University of Glasgow in Scotland and Shaless Hammon of the University of Utah.

"The record of our past is written in our parasites," said Rogers.

Lice require direct physical contact between hosts for transmission. They also form new species each time the host, in this case humans, does, Reed said, making them excellent markers for tracing human evolutionary history.

After infesting Homo erectus for a million years, one type of louse jumped from that soon-to-be-extinct species onto Homo sapiens.

The research confirms the "out-of-Africa" theory that the population of Homo sapiens rapidly expanded after a small group of our early ancestors left Africa between 150,000 and 50,000 years ago. Other recent studies had suggested that Homo sapiens indeed may have had contact with Homo erectus not in Africa, but in Asia, 50,000 years ago.


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