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首页> 外文期刊>American Journal of Physical Anthropology >Knuckle-walking anteater: A convergence test of adaptation for purported knuckle-walking features of African hominidae
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Knuckle-walking anteater: A convergence test of adaptation for purported knuckle-walking features of African hominidae

机译:食指行走食蚁兽:针对非洲人科动物据称的食指行走特征的适应性融合测试

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摘要

Appeals to synapomorphic features of the wrist and hand in African apes, early hominins, and modern humans as evidence of knuckle-walking ancestry for the hominin lineage rely on accurate interpretations of those features as adaptations to knuckle-walking locomotion. Because Gorilla, Pan, and Homo share a relatively close common ancestor, the interpretation of such features is confounded somewhat by phylogeny. The study presented here examines the evolution of a similar locomotor regime in New World anteaters (order Xenarthra, family Myrmecophagidae) and uses the terrestrial giant anteater (Myrmecophaga tridactyla) as a convergence test of adaptation for purported knuckle-walking features of the Hominidae. During the stance phase of locomotion, Myrmecophaga transmits loads through flexed digits and a vertical Manus, with hyperextension occurring at the metacarpophalangeal joints of the weight-bearing rays. This differs fro the locomotion of smaller, arboreal anteaters of outgroup genera Tamandua and Cyclopes that employ extended wrist postures during above-branch quadrupedality. A number of features shared by Myrmecophaga, and Pan and Gorilla facilitate load transmission or limit extension, thereby stabilizing the wrist and hand during knuckle-walking, and distinguish these taxa from their respective outgroups. These traits are a distally extended dorsal ridge of the distal radius, proximal expansion of the nonarticular surface of the dorsal capitate, a pronounced articular ridge on the dorsal aspects of the load-bearing metacarpal heads, and metacarpal heads that are wider dorsally than volarly. Only the proximal expansion of the nonarticular area of the dorsal capitate distinguishes knuckle-walkers from digitigrade cercopithecids, but features shared with digitigrade primates might be adaptive to the use of a vertical Manus of some sort in the stance phase of terrestrial locomotion. The appearance of capitate nonarticular expansion and the dorsal ridge of the distal radius in the hominin lineage might be indicative of a knuckle-walking ancestry for bipedal hominins if interpreted within the biomechanical and phylogenetic context of hominid locomotor evolution.
机译:呼吁非洲猿猴,早期人类和现代人类的手腕和手的关节突形态特征作为人类形态的指关节行走祖先的证据,依赖于对这些特征的准确解释,以适应指关节行走的运动。由于Gorilla,Pan和Homo有着相对较近的共同祖先,因此对这些特征的解释在某种程度上因系统发育而混淆。此处进行的研究检查了新大陆食蚁兽(Xenarthra,Myrmecophagage科)的类似运动机制的演变,并使用陆生巨食蚁兽(Myrmecophaga tridactyla)作为适应性的收敛测试,以证明人科的指关节走路特征。在运动的站立阶段,Myrmecophaga通过弯曲的手指和垂直的Manus传递负荷,在负重射线的掌指关节处发生过度伸展。这与塔门杜亚和独眼巨人属的较小的树栖食蚁兽的运动不同,后者在分支四足动物中使用延长的手腕姿势。 Myrmecophaga,Pan和Gorilla具有许多共同的功能,可促进负载传递或限制伸展,从而在指关节行走过程中稳定手腕和手,并将这些分类群与它们各自的外群区分开。这些特征是radius骨远端的向远侧延伸的背脊,背侧头的非关节表面的向近侧扩展,承重掌骨头的背侧的明显关节脊,以及背侧比掌侧宽的掌骨。只有背头人非关节区域的近端扩张才能将指关节行者与指节动物的腕足类动物区分开,但是与指节动物的灵长类动物共有的特征可能适合于在地面运动的站立阶段使用某种垂直的手掌。如果在人机能运动进化的生物力学和系统发育背景下进行解释,那么人参谱系中人头的非关节扩张和远端radius骨的背脊的出现可能表明两足动物人参的关节行走祖先。

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