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Biomechanics of Vertical Clinging and Grasping in Primates.

机译:灵长类动物的垂直附着和抓握的生物力学。

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摘要

Primates and many other animals that move in an arboreal environment often cling, sometimes for long periods, on vertical supports. Primates, however, face a special challenge in that almost all primates bear nails on the tips of their digits rather than claws. Squirrels and other arboreal animals possess claws and/or adhesive pads on their digits in order to hold their weight on vertical substrates. Assuming the ancestral primate was arboreal and lost claws prior to the radiation of primates this paradox has important implications and raises a significant question about living primates and early primate evolution: how can primates maintain vertical postures without claws and how did early primates meet this challenge? Primate vertically clinging and grasping postures (VCG) have been studied in the wild and theoretical models of VCG postures have been described. This dissertation builds on this work, by studying the biomechanics of VCG postures in primates. Based on mechanical models, it was hypothesized VCG posture in primates will vary in three ways.;Hypothesis 1: Species with different morphological features associated with different locomotor modes will vertically cling and grasp in different ways.;Hypothesis 2: As substrate size increases, primates will place their arms to the side of the support and adjust posture and muscle recruitment in order to maintain a necessary tangential to normal force ratio to resist gravity.;Hypothesis 3: On substrates of the same relative size, larger animals should be less effective at maintaining VCG postures due to scaling relationships between muscle strength and body mass.;The sample consisted of multiple individuals from eight strepsirrhine species at the Duke Lemur Center. The sample varied in locomotor mode---habitual vertical clinging and leaping (VCL) compared to less specialized arboreal quadrupeds---and body mass---100 to 4,000 grams. Subjects were videorecorded while holding VCG postures on substrates of increasing size. Substrate preference data were calculated based on frequency and duration of VCG postures on each substrate. Qualitative kinematic data were recorded for a maximum of thirty trials per individual, per substrate. Angular data were calculated for forelimbs and hindlimbs from these videos for ten trials per individual per substrate. In addition, kinetic data from an imbedded force transducer were collected for two species that vary in locomotor mode, but not body mass.;There are several significant and relevant results from this study that address both primate functional anatomy and locomotor evolution. Hypothesis one was supported by hand and hindlimb joint postures, shown to be highly sensitive to locomotor mode. VCL primates exhibited deeply flexed limbs and more hand grasping (wrapping around the substrate) versus parallel hand postures and use of bowed finger postures compared to less specialized primates. Kinetically, species were shown to bear the majority of their weight in their hindlimbs relative to their forelimbs. The forelimb joints and foot showed little variation by habitual locomotor mode. Hypothesis two found support in that species tend to prefer smaller substrates, clinging less frequently for shorter durations as substrate size increases. Hand posture changed as size increased, as primates (except for the slow lorises) in this study grasped with their pollex on smaller substrates, but the pollex disengaged in grasping on larger substrates. Hypothesis three was not supported; body mass did not influence VCG postures.;Taken together, the finding that the forelimb held a wide range of postures on each substrate size for all species and played a limited role in weight-bearing suggests the forelimb free to move (to adjust posture and or forage). The hindlimb plays a more specific role in weight-bearing and is more sensitive to variations in primate anatomy. Additionally, these findings lead to hypotheses concerning the relatively short pollexes of primates, and that the ancestral primate was smaller than 100g and preferred small substrates as found in a fine-branch niche.
机译:在树栖环境中移动的灵长类动物和许多其他动物经常在垂直支撑物上附着,有时长时间附着。但是,灵长类动物面临一个特殊的挑战,因为几乎所有的灵长类动物都会在其手指的尖端而不是爪上钉上指甲。松鼠和其他树栖动物的手指上都有爪子和/或粘着垫,以便将其重量保持在垂直的底物上。假设祖先的灵长类动物是树栖动物,并且在辐射灵长类动物之前失去了爪子,那么这个悖论就具有重要的意义,并提出了一个关于活灵长类灵长类动物和早期灵长类动物进化的重大问题:灵长类动物如何在没有爪的情况下保持垂直姿势,早期灵长类动物如何应对这一挑战?在野生环境中研究了灵长类动物的垂直抓握姿势(VCG),并描述了VCG姿势的理论模型。本文通过研究灵长类动物VCG姿势的生物力学,以此为基础。根据机械模型,假设灵长类动物的VCG姿势将以三种方式变化。假设1:具有与不同运动模式相关的不同形态特征的物种将以不同的方式垂直附着和抓住。假设2:随着基质尺寸的增加,灵长类动物会将其手臂放在支撑物的一侧,并调整姿势和肌肉募集,以维持必要的切向力与法向力之比,以抵抗重力。假设3:在相对大小相同的底物上,较大的动物应不太有效由于肌肉力量与体重之间的比例关系,维持了VCG姿势。该样本由来自杜克狐猴中心的8种链球菌种类的多个个体组成。与运动性较弱的四足动物四足动物相比-和体重-100至4,000克,样品的运动模式有所不同-习惯性垂直附着和跳跃(VCL)。在增加尺寸的基底上保持VCG姿势的同时对对象进行了录像。根据每个基板上VCG姿势的频率和持续时间计算基板偏好数据。记录定性运动学数据,每个底物每个个体最多进行30次试验。从这些视频计算前肢和后肢的角度数据,每个底物每个人进行十次试验。此外,还从嵌入式力传感器中收集了两个物种的动力学数据,这些物种在运动模式下变化,但在体重方面没有变化。该研究有一些重要且相关的结果涉及灵长类动物的功能解剖和运动进化。假设一由手和后肢的关节姿势支持,对运动模式高度敏感。与不那么专业的灵长类动物相比,VCL灵长类动物的肢体弯曲得很深,与平行姿势和手掌姿势相比,它们的抓握力更大(包裹在基底周围)。从动力学上说,相对于前肢,物种在后肢中承担着大部分重量。前肢关节和脚在习惯运动模式下几乎没有变化。假说二发现,物种的支持倾向于更小的底物,随着底物尺寸的增加,它们在较短的时间内粘附的频率降低。手的姿势随着大小的增加而变化,因为在这项研究中,灵长类动物(除了缓慢的虫卵)将其花粉握在较小的基质上,但花粉在抓紧较大的基质上却脱离了。假设三不受支持;体重不影响VCG姿势。总而言之,发现前肢在所有物种的每种底物大小上均具有多种姿势,并且在负重中作用有限,这表明前肢可以自由移动(调整姿势和或草料)。后肢在负重中起更具体的作用,并且对灵长类动物解剖结构的变化更敏感。此外,这些发现导致有关灵长类动物的花粉相对较短的假说,并且祖先灵长类动物小于100克,并且在细分支生态位中发现了较小的优选底物。

著录项

  • 作者

    Johnson, Laura Elizabeth.;

  • 作者单位

    Duke University.;

  • 授予单位 Duke University.;
  • 学科 Anthropology Physical.;Biophysics Biomechanics.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2012
  • 页码 265 p.
  • 总页数 265
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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