|
|
|
|||
| Home Help Feedback Subscriptions Archive Search Table of Contents | ||||
First published online November 28, 2008
Journal of Experimental Biology 211, 3775-3789 (2008)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2008
doi: 10.1242/jeb.019802
Forelimb proportions and kinematics: how are small primates different from other small mammals?
Institut für Spezielle Zoologie und Evolutionsbiologie, Friedrich Schiller Universität Jena, Erbertstrasse 1, D-07743 Jena, Germany
e-mail: schmidt.manuela{at}uni-jena.de
Accepted 25 September 2008
| Summary |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Key words: joint kinematics, angular excursion, intralimb proportions, limb length scaling, Microcebus murinus, Eulemur fulvus, Saguinus oedipus, Saimiri sciureus
| INTRODUCTION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Along with the locomotion-related primate features listed by Martin
(Martin, 1968
;
Martin, 1986
), various
relative characters have been proposed to be unique to primates: larger limb
excursion, greater step length, lower step frequency and longer limbs
(Alexander et al., 1979
;
Alexander and Maloiy, 1984
;
Reynolds, 1987
;
Larson et al., 2001
). The
adaptive advantage of these features for locomotion on narrow branches is
discussed in numerous recent publications. For example, lower step frequency
means longer contact time for the limbs, which significantly reduces the peak
forces the limbs are subjected to by gravity and, thus, further enhances the
compliance of primate walking (Demes et
al., 1990
; Schmitt,
1999
). Although assessment of the polarity of these relative
characters greatly depends on sample composition, phylogenetic hypotheses have
often played a minor role in selecting species for comparison. Rather,
comparative studies between `typical' primates belonging to Cebidae,
Cercopithecidae, and even Hominoidea and `typical' members of the artificial
taxon `non-primates' (e.g. cats, dogs, horses) form the majority of literature
in this field of research. Furthermore, small sample size often weakens some
of the most frequently cited references. For example, the notion that primates
have longer limb bones and, thus, longer limbs than other mammals
(Alexander et al., 1979
) is
based on data from six primate species. Reynolds' assumption
(Reynolds, 1987
) that primates
display greater hindlimb angular excursion is based on a sample of four
primates (chimpanzee, gibbon, spider monkey and brown lemur). Larson
(Larson, 1998
) and Larson et
al. (Larson et al., 2000
;
Larson et al., 2001
) went to
great lengths to test the hypothesis proposed by Reynolds on the basis of a
much larger sample (53 primates and 49 `non-primates' of several phylogenetic
groups). Although this outstanding sample could potentially have allowed the
ancestral pattern for each phylogenetic lineage to be derived, the authors
compared the mean values of each group, making it impossible to estimate
character polarity. The comparative evidence relating to whether limb lengths,
angular excursion and step length in primates are uniquely large thus needs to
be surveyed critically with regard to character polarity. In an earlier study,
Schmidt (Schmidt, 2005a
)
compared the hindlimb kinematics of small arboreal quadruped primates with
those of other non-cursorial mammals and suggested that the differences that
occur with increasing body size result from the decreasing angular excursion
in cursorial mammals, with larger primates merely retaining the primitive
condition of large hindlimb excursion seen in the smaller primates,
tree-shrews, rodents and marsupials.
Fischer and his team (Fischer et al.,
2002
) proposed kinematic principles for the locomotion of small
mammals, which is suggested as being adaptive to postural stability in
unanticipated situations within a disordered spatial arrangement of surfaces.
These principles include a permanent crouched limb posture in which the most
proximal element is predominant in the protraction and retraction of the limb.
Intrinsic limb joints (shoulder, elbow, knee and ankle) mainly serve to
provide limb compliance. It has further been suggested that some of these
principles increase the self-stability of the limb and, thus, minimize neural
control effort (Fischer and Blickhan,
2006
). These are the so-called `pantograph behaviour' (parallel
motion of scapula and forearm and femur and tarsometatarsus, respectively) and
the placement of the forelimb right below the eye. These features characterize
the locomotion of small mammals regardless of their phylogeny. Their adaptive
advantage for locomotion on irregular and uncertain substrates is further
evident in the re-acquisition of a crouched posture in small-sized mammals
that descent from larger-sized ancestors such as the hyraxes (Hyracoidea), the
mouse deer (Tragulidae) or the ferrets (Mustelidae)
(Jenkins, 1971
;
Fischer et al., 2002
). It,
therefore, seems reasonable to assume that small arboreal primates would
benefit greatly from retaining these principles but it has been demonstrated
that primates display a more extended and more protracted forelimb posture at
the beginning of a step cycle than other mammals
(Larson, 1998
;
Larson et al., 2000
).
The ultimate objective of the present study is to find out whether these changes in forelimb posture are related to changes in body size and/or to changes in the skeletal intra- and interlimb proportions. Considering the forelimb geometry of other small mammals on the one hand and the overall uniformity of hindlimb geometry in small mammals including primates on the other hand, it will be hypothesized that, in primates, changes in forelimb geometry are caused by constraints rather than by their increased adaptive value for arboreal locomotion on narrow supports. The present paper attempts to find out what kind of constraints act on forelimb geometry. The first part of the study investigates forelimb kinematics in four species of small arboreal quadruped primates (mouse lemur, brown lemur, cotton-top tamarin and squirrel monkey) with regard to the kinematic principles displayed by other small mammals: the predominance of scapula excursion in limb protraction and retraction, the parallel motion of scapula and forearm and the function of the intrinsic limb joints in providing limb compliance.
As the three-segmented fore- and hindlimbs of quadruped mammals are
constrained to display the same pivot height and angular excursion, intralimb
proportions and the length ratio between fore- and hindlimbs play a crucial
role in adjusting limb kinematics to certain biomechanical demands such as
postural stability and stress reduction. A crucial factor in the
primate-specific diagonal sequence gait is the relationship between limb
length and body size because long limbs increase the risk of interference
between ipsilateral fore- and hindlimbs. It can be hypothesized that the
relationship between limb length and body size and the ratio between fore- and
hindlimb length act as constraints on limb geometry. Therefore, the second
part of this study examines the scaling pattern of forelimb length, the length
ratio between forelimbs and hind limbs and the intralimb proportions of the
forelimb. Fischer and Blickhan demonstrated that the crouched forelimb posture
of small mammals is combined with skeletal intralimb scapula, humerus and
radius proportions of approximately 1:1:1
(Fischer and Blickhan, 2006
).
A more extended limb posture requires asymmetrical proportions for
self-stability (Seyfarth et al.,
2001
). In this morphometric part of the paper, a broader sample of
quadrupeds is considered in an attempt to test whether primates in general
differ from other mammals or whether previously suggested differences in limb
bone lengths characterize only larger primates that display more derived
locomotor behaviours such as terrestrial quadrupedalism.
Finally, the discussion section proposes a hypothesis about the hierarchical structure of dependencies in the character evolution of primate locomotion. This section explores the way in which concurrence between initial adaptations to walking on narrow supports (prehensile hindlimbs, diagonal footfall sequence and dynamic weight shift mechanism) and subsequent adaptations to other locomotor modes constrain the limb geometry in primates.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
Criteria for species selection were derived from the hypotheses placing the
adaptive origin of primates in a small branch milieu
(Napier, 1967
;
Cartmill, 1972
;
Rose, 1973
;
Sussman, 1991
). Accordingly,
the animals needed to be small in terms of body size but had to span a
significant size range in order for the influence of size variation to be
studied. Animals had to use arboreal quadrupedalism as their preferred
locomotor mode. The four selected species fulfil these criteria. They prefer
to run and walk on horizontal and oblique branches but are also capable of
leaping. Grey mouse lemurs are the smallest primates in the world. Cotton-top
tamarins and squirrel monkeys are small quadrupedal New World monkeys.
Motion analysis
Animals were habituated to walk on a raised pole or on a horizontal
motor-driven rope-mill – an arboreal analogue of a treadmill. The
diameter of the support was adapted to the preferred natural substrate of the
species (mouse lemur, 10 mm; cotton-top tamarin, 25 mm; squirrel monkey, 30
mm; brown lemur, 50 mm). Data on substrate preferences were obtained from
several sources (Walker, 1979
;
Garber, 1980
;
Arms et al., 2002
). The speed
of the rope-mill was not fixed but was adjusted to obtain the animal's
preferred walking velocity.
The walking velocity of each species varies moderately. Isolated very slow
or very fast strides were excluded from the study. To compensate for
differences in body mass across the sample, velocity was converted into Froude
number using the Formula Fr=v2/gl
(Alexander and Jayes, 1983
),
where v is raw speed, g is gravitational acceleration
and l is a characteristic length of the animal. The cube root of body
mass was used here as a characteristic length variable instead of hip height
or hindlimb length because geometric similarity of hindlimb geometry is not
present among the four primates.
Uniplanar cineradiographs were collected in lateral view at 150 frames per
second. The methods of collecting and processing kinematic variables from
cineradiographs have been described in detail elsewhere
(Schmidt, 2005b
) and will be
summarized only briefly here. The X-ray equipment consists of an automatic
Phillips® unit with one X-ray source which applies pulsed X-ray shots
(Institut für den Wissenschaftlichen Film, Göttingen). The X-ray
images were recorded from the image amplifier either onto 35 mm film
(Arritechno R35-150 camera, Arnold & Richter Cine Technik, München,
Germany) or using a high-speed CCD camera (Mikromak® Camsys; Mikromak
Service K. Brinkmann, Berlin, Germany). X-ray films were then analyzed
frame-by-frame to identify previously defined skeletal landmarks (software
`Unimark' by R. Voss, Tübingen, Germany)
(Fig. 1A). The software
`Unimark' calculates angles and distances based on the x and
y coordinates of the landmarks, correcting the distortions of the
X-ray maps automatically with reference to the x and y
coordinates of a recorded grid.
|
The following kinematic variables were measured or calculated: (1) segment angles – calculated relative to the horizontal plane (the term `protraction' is used for the cranial displacement of the distal end of each segment, `retraction' describes its caudal displacement) (Fig. 1B). (2) Limb joint angles – defined anatomically and measured at the flexor side of each joint (Fig. 1B). (3) Maximum amplitudes of joint excursions during the support phase – difference between maximum extension angle and maximum flexion angle. (4) Total angular excursions of the forelimb – measured as the angle between the lines connecting the point of contact with the ground and the proximal pivot at touchdown and lift-off (Fig. 1C). The proximal pivot of the forelimb is the instantaneous centre of scapular rotation, held and guided by muscles. The pivot corresponds to the point of zero velocity and is usually marked by the intersection of the two overlaying scapular spines near the vertebral border. The forelimb pivot can thus generally be estimated to be the proximal end of the scapular spine. (5) Protraction angle and retraction angle of the forelimb – total angular excursion was divided into an anterior and a posterior angle by drawing a vertical line through the point of ground contact (Fig. 1C). (6) The relationship between anatomical limb length and the shortest functional limb length – distance between the proximal pivot and the point of ground contact – at mid-support, which, here, is used as a kinematic key point, namely the vertical alignment of ground contact point and the proximal pivot of the limb. The term `mid-support' is normally defined as the instant of the peak vertical substrate reaction force, which nearly coincides with the instant at which the shoulder joint passes the wrist joint.
Morphometry
Skeletal specimens (N=222) of 110 mammalian species were examined
at the Phylogenetisches Museum Jena, Germany, at the Museum für
Naturkunde Berlin, Germany and at the Naturhistorisches Museum Bern,
Switzerland. Over 50% of the sample was composed of specimens collected in the
wild (N=113), nine specimens were captured wild and then kept in a
zoo. The remaining specimens died in a zoo and were probably born in
captivity. The adult status of the specimens was judged on the basis of the
fusion of the epiphyses of the long bones. In those species for which more
than one specimen was available, the largest specimen in terms of total fore-
and hindlimb length was chosen. It was decided not to calculate mean values
for each species because the intraspecific and interspecific allometry of limb
bones can be different (e.g. Steudel,
1982
). While static intraspecific allometry between different
sized adults of a species is determined by ontogenetic development
(Wayne, 1986
;
Lammers and German, 2002
;
Schilling and Petrovitch,
2005
), interspecific allometry reflects size-related mechanical
adaptations. Accordingly, the limb proportions of different sized conspecifics
do not scale isometrically and can be very different. The taxa included and
the sample representing each taxon can be seen in
Table 2, along with the
corresponding body mass values and the measured lengths of scapula, humerus
and radius. Those specimens labelled with an asterisk denote specimens for
which body masses were compiled from the literature. The available
head–trunk length in those specimens was used to decide whether the mean
or the maximum body mass values were more appropriate in estimating the
unknown mass (Grzimek, 1987
;
Rowe, 1996
;
Garbutt, 1999
;
Nowak, 1999
). All other body
mass values relate to the skeletal specimens.
|
The majority of taxa included in the primate sample consist of arboreal
quadrupedal primates. The members of the Cheirogaleidae, Lemuridae,
Callitrichidae and Cebidae prefer to walk and run quadrupedally along narrow
branches but also use other modes of progression such as climbing and leaping.
However, none of these taxa exhibits distinct specializations for leaping
(e.g. extremely elongated hind limbs)
(Rowe, 1996
;
Fleagle, 1999
). Included
Galagonidae are mostly such species that prefer to walk and run quadrupedally
but do not show the morphological specializations of vertical clingers and
leapers with the exception of the Northern lesser bush baby. Loridae walk and
climb with large limb excursions but none of these primates has been observed
to leap (Walker, 1979
;
Demes et al., 1990
;
Schmitt and Lemelin, 2004
).
Quadruped climbing is – along with walking and leaping – a
preferred mode of locomotion in Colobinae
(Napier, 1963
;
Morbeck, 1979
;
Isler and Grüter, 2005
).
Cercopithecine Old World monkeys (baboons, macaques, patas monkeys, guenons)
are primarily adapted to semi-terrestrial and terrestrial quadrupedalism
(Napier, 1967
;
Rollinson and Martin, 1981
;
McCrossin et al., 1998
).
Still, most guenons and some macaques have returned to arboreality.
Re-adaptations to arboreality in guenons have been observed to affect the
morphology of the autopodia more than that of proximal limb elements
(Meldrum, 1991
;
Schmitt and Larson, 1995
). The
marsupial, rodent and carnivore samples mostly include small arboreal and
terrestrial species. The majority of these mammals tend to move in a roughly
similar fashion characterized by a crouched limb posture
(Jenkins, 1971
;
Fischer et al., 2002
).
Cursorial specializations were attributed to the larger carnivores (racoon,
cats and viverrids) (Jenkins and Camazine,
1977
; Nowak,
1999
).
In order to evaluate the proportions of a three-segmented limb structure,
intralimb proportions in this study are expressed as the percentage each
segment length represents of the sum of the lengths of the segments. The hand
is omitted due to its negligible quantitative contribution to forelimb
protraction and retraction in palmigrade mammals
(Fischer et al., 2002
;
Schmidt, 2005b
). Only a few
species in the sample use their hands in a digitigrade posture (some
terrestrial cercopithecines and some carnivores) but for comparative reasons
their hand proportions were not considered in this study.
Interlimb ratio is calculated for the three-segmented limbs using the
following formula: scapula+humerus+radius/femur+tibia+ tarsometatarsus in
percent. The morphometric data of the hindlimb for this sample were taken from
a previous publication (Schmidt,
2005a
). Original data on hindlimb length for the new specimens in
the sample (Loridae, Galagonidae, Daubentoniidae and Colobinae) can be
provided on request.
A one-way fixed-factor analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to determine
the degree of variance of forelimb proportions. Comparison took place on the
lowest taxonomic level of families, among primates at least. The lower sample
size of tree-shrews, marsupials, rodents and carnivores made a further
subdivision into families less appropriate. Because sample sizes are unequal
across the taxa, the GT2 method was employed
(Hochberg, 1974
;
Sokal and Rohlf, 1995
) to
compare group means and to calculate lower and upper comparison limits for
each sample mean. Means are significantly different if their comparison
intervals do not overlap (Hochberg,
1974
; Sokal and Rohlf,
1995
). The comparison interval is different from the confidence
interval because its computation uses the critical values of the studentized
maximum modulus distribution for the comparison of multiple means instead of
the Student's t-distribution used to calculate confidence
intervals.
It was investigated whether the allometric scaling of the relative segment
lengths is a significant source of their variation. Relative segment lengths
and body mass values were log-transformed (ln) to produce log shape variables.
Bivariate regressions were derived using the reduced major axis (RMA)
line-fitting technique. The coefficient of determination
r2 was calculated in order to estimate the portion of
variation in relative segment length that can be explained by the variation of
body mass (Sokal and Rohlf,
1995
).
| RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
Forelimb kinematics in grey mouse lemurs, brown lemurs, cotton-top tamarins and squirrel monkeys
Angular excursion of the forelimb
The proximal pivot of the forelimb is the instantaneous centre of scapular
rotation, held and guided by muscles. This point is on the same height level
as the ipsilateral hip joint providing fore- and hindlimbs the same functional
length. Lemurs, however, seem to have unequal functional limb lengths, judging
by the strong downward incline of their trunks when they walk, meaning that
their proximal scapular border is lower than their hip joint. The scapula
excursions of the brown lemur are very large and the two spines hardly overlap
at touchdown or lift-off indicating that the point of zero velocity is
situated outside the body (Fig.
3). The measured angle of total forelimb excursion in the brown
lemur (86±3 deg.), therefore, is not only significantly larger than
that of the other primates but is also larger than its hindlimb excursion
angle (74 deg.) (Schmidt,
2005a
). With the exception of the brown lemur, total forelimb
excursion is fairly similar among the primates
(Table 3). Angular excursion
hardly changes with increasing speed. Variations in step length are often
accompanied by variations of limb stiffness and functional limb length.
Therefore, angular excursion does not necessarily increase with increasing
step length.
|
|
By drawing a vertical line through the point of ground contact, the total angular excursion of the forelimb can be split into a retraction angle and a protraction angle. The protraction angle of the forelimb is always larger than the retraction angle. The retraction angle is fairly constant in the grey mouse lemur, the cotton-top tamarin and the squirrel monkey but larger in the brown lemur (Table 3). Accordingly, protraction is more variable. The forelimb of the brown lemur is the most protracted; the forelimb of the squirrel monkey is the least protracted. Obviously, body size has no significant effect on angular excursion in the three smaller primates but the brown lemur exhibits a higher degree of forelimb protraction.
Kinematics of limb segments
As previously shown for the hindlimbs in these species
(Schmidt, 2005a
), highly
uniform limb excursion can be the result of quite different segment and joint
kinematics. This is also the case for the forelimb.
Fig. 4 shows the typical
excursion of scapula, humerus, radius and hand during the support phase of a
step cycle. Table 4 lists mean
values, standard deviations and the overall range of the touchdown and
lift-off angles, as well as the amplitude of excursion during the stance
phase.
|
|
The movement of the scapula is the most similar factor among the species (Fig. 4). Mean angles at touchdown and lift-off and the mean amplitude of scapula retraction hardly differ among the species (Table 4). Scapula retraction starts at an angle of approximately 45 deg., continues more or less regularly throughout the support phase and ends at an angle of approximately 90 deg. No yield has been observed in the scapulo–thoracic `joint', and in this respect the most proximal forelimb joint is comparable with the hip joint of the hindlimb.
Humeral excursion differs much more among the species and in such a way that body size seems to influence the degree of humeral protraction. The brown lemur exhibits the greatest humeral protraction and the largest amplitude of humeral excursion. The lowest mean touchdown angle was measured in the grey mouse lemur at less than 90 deg. Cotton-top tamarins and squirrel monkeys protract their humeri to a similarly larger degree. The average touchdown angle is approximately 100 deg. but increases with increasing walking velocity in both species (Saguinus, r2=0.245; Saimiri, r2=0.516). It should be noted, however, that despite the lower degree of humeral protraction, the forelimb in the mouse lemur exhibits the same degree of protraction as in the cotton-top tamarin and the squirrel monkey. In all four species, the angular velocity of humeral protraction is higher in the first half of the support phase and slows down to near zero during the last 10% of the stance phase when the humerus reaches a more or less horizontal position. This positioning is influenced by walking speed in the brown lemur (r2=0.241). At higher speeds, the distal end of the humerus is raised upon the level of the shoulder. It might be affected by the overall slower walking speed that the humerus of the squirrel monkey is markedly less retracted and seldom, if ever, reaches a horizontal position.
Throughout most of the support phase, the forearm moves exactly in parallel
to the scapula (Fig. 4). This
matched-motion pattern of the first and the third segment is said to be
typical of a three-segmented leg and can also be seen in the hindlimb between
thigh and foot (Fischer and Witte,
1998
; Fischer et al.,
2002
). The matched-motion pattern is only broken at the beginning
and end of the support phase, when forearm excursions exceed scapula
excursions. The variability of forearm excursion among the four species does
not appear to be related to size. In the cotton-top tamarin, the degree of
forearm retraction is influenced by speed (r2=0.274) in
such a way that step length increases by an increasing lift-off angle of the
forearm.
While the upper arm and forearm undergo large angular excursions and the scapula dominates limb retraction due to its high pivot, the hand plays a minor role in forelimb excursion. All four species place their hands in a palmigrade posture. The touchdown angle deviates from zero only because of the thickness of the palmar patches. Carpus and metacarpus are lifted from the support during the second half of the stance phase. The angles at lift-off vary widely in each species but their mean values are similar (Table 4).
Kinematics of forelimb joints
Almost all quadrupedal mammals flex their limbs to a certain degree during
the support phase. This means that the anatomical limb length, i.e. the sum of
the lengths of limb segments, does not correspond to the functional limb
length, i.e. the distance between the point of ground contact and the proximal
pivot of a limb. The ratio between functional limb length and anatomical limb
length expresses the degree of overall limb flexion and normally varies
throughout the support phase. Functional limb length is at its minimum when
the hand passes under the scapula pivot. Several authors term this posture
`mid-stance' or `mid-support' regardless of its timing relative to stance
duration because it marks the transition from the braking phase to the
propulsive phase in limb retraction. Table
5 gives the mean angles at mid-stance of the limb joint
illustrating how each joint contributes to overall limb flexion and, thus, to
the compliance of the limb. Of the four primates in this study, the forelimb
of the grey mouse lemur is the most flexed throughout the support phase. At
touchdown, it forms 82% of the anatomical limb length and at lift-off, 74%. In
the most flexed posture, functional forelimb length is 62% of the anatomical
length. The most extended forelimbs are exhibited by the squirrel monkey
(ratio: touchdown 96%, lift-off 91%). Although the ratio between functional
and anatomical limb length is very similar to that in the brown lemur
(touchdown 95%, lift-off 94%), limb flexion at mid-stance is less pronounced
in the squirrel monkey (77%) than in the brown lemur (73%). Generally, the
forelimb is most extended at the beginning of the step cycle. The grey mouse
lemur and the brown lemur significantly decrease limb compliance with
increasing speed. In the grey mouse lemur, the amount of shoulder flexion
(r2=0.338) and elbow flexion
(r2=0.327) during the contact phase decreases. Limb
compliance in the brown lemur is reduced due to a decrease of elbow flexion
(r2=0.429).
|
Fig. 4 depicts the joint excursions for the shoulder, elbow and wrist joint of the four species during the support phase of a step cycle. Maximum shoulder joint extension occurs at the beginning of the cycle. The shoulder joint is almost fully extended in the brown lemur but only moderately extended in the grey mouse lemur. A significant yield followed by a re-extension phase was observed only in the squirrel monkey. In the other three species, shoulder flexion lasts until mid-stance, from whence on the shoulder joint seems to be frozen at a constant angle and the humerus is further displaced only by scapular retraction.
The flexion and re-extension pattern of the elbow joint reveals the prominent role it plays in yielding (Fig. 4; Table 5). With the exception of in the grey mouse lemur, the elbow joint is at its most extended at touchdown. Maximum flexion occurs at mid-stance.
While the hand is resting on the support, the wrist joint extends continuously (dorsiflexion) as a result of the retraction of the forearm during the first half of the stance phase. Maximum extension occurs when the hand passes under the elbow joint. Then, the hand is subsequently lifted from the ground by the flexion of the wrist. This motion can be fairly rapid, as observed in the grey mouse lemur and the squirrel monkey.
Forelimb length and limb proportions in quadrupedal primates and other mammals
The evaluation of limb proportions focuses on the basic difference between
primates and other mammals of small body size. Greater effort was, therefore,
made to obtain large samples of small-sized taxa, in order to permit
comparison between those animals thought to be closest to the presumed
ancestral morphometric pattern of each phylogenetic lineage.
Biewener emphasizes that scaling analyses in a large and phylogenetically
diverse sample are often marred by the fact that body size-related effects
cannot accurately be distinguished from phylogenetic signals and other
functional determinants of skeletal form (evolutionary ancestry, life style,
locomotor behaviour) (Biewener,
2005
). Therefore, morphometry in this study focuses on comparison
at the family level within primates. Differences in forelimb length and
proportion can be expected to reflect size-related effects much more
accurately on this lower taxonomic level due to the greater similarity of
locomotor behaviours. The cercopithecid Old World monkeys were divided into
the two subfamilies Cercopithecinae and Colobinae because the colobus monkeys
and leaf monkeys generally use more quadrupedal climbing, suspensory behaviour
and leaping in progression than the macaques, baboons and guenons. The lower
sample size of tree-shrews, marsupials, rodents and carnivores made a further
subdivision into families less appropriate.
Scaling of forelimb length to body mass
Fig. 5 shows the scaling
pattern of forelimb length to body mass for the entire sample of quadrupedal
mammals included in this study. Body mass ranges between 15 g (dormouse
Muscardinus avellanarius) and 23.5 kg (baboon Papio
hamadryas). Because subdivision of the primate sample into the eight
families would be less illustrative, primates were subdivided into
Strepsirhini, Platyrrhini and Catarrhini for graphical reasons. Allometry
coefficients are shown in Table
6 along with the corresponding confidence intervals at the various
taxonomic levels, which indicate that the scaling pattern strongly depends on
the degrees of relationship between the taxa considered. Slopes were
considered to deviate significantly from isometry if the 95% confidence
interval did not include the isometric expectation (0.33). The
F-value indicates that body mass influences forelimb length
significantly in all groups but the Galagonidae and Colobinae.
|
|
Forelimb length tends to scale with positive allometry in most primate families, tree-shrews, rodents and carnivores but only in primates does the confidence interval of the allometry coefficient fail to overlap with the isometric expectation of 0.33. However, this is not the case for primate families. The y-intercept and its 95% confidence interval indicate that primates as a group do not have significantly longer forelimbs than the other mammals. Adaptive differences among primates are reflected by the huge variation in y-intercepts but the confidence intervals do widely overlap (Table 6). Among the smallest species of all groups, where body mass is below 150 g, forelimb lengths are equal (Fig. 5). A clear distinction between primates and other mammals appears if body mass exceeds 200 g. The forelimbs of primates, then, are relatively longer than those of other mammals, regardless of the locomotor habitat or phylogenetic position of the latter.
Interlimb proportions
Almost all species considered here have shorter forelimbs than hindlimbs
(Fig. 6). Interlimb ratio is
calculated for the three-segmented limbs using the following formula: scapula+
humerus+radius/femur+tibia+tarsometatarsus in percent. The majority of
specimens up to a body size of about 5 kg have interlimb ratios below 90,
except in the case of marsupials. No distinction can be made between rodents,
carnivores, primates and tree-shrews. Scaling effects emerge if body mass
exceeds 2.5 kg but they are significant only for the Cebidae and
Cercopithecinae, in which the interlimb ratio increases with increasing body
size. The four primates investigated in the kinematic study exhibit the
following interlimb ratios: grey mouse lemur 75, brown lemur 73, cotton-top
tamarin 70 and squirrel monkey 77.
|
Intralimb proportions of the forelimb
Fig. 7 shows the mean values
of the relative segment lengths and their associated comparison intervals at
the taxonomic level of families (primates) or higher phylogenetic levels in
the other mammals. Primates differ significantly from other mammals in the
relative lengths of their scapula and radius, with Cheirogaleidae being
intermediate. Scapula proportion in primates has reduced to approximately 20%
of forelimb length whereas radius proportion has increased to approximately
38–40%. The relative length of the middle segment, however, is fairly
constant. In most cases, the comparison intervals of the humerus mutually
overlap among the groups. Changes in forelimb proportion are, thus, mainly
brought about by alterations in the relative lengths of the outer
segments.
|
Although group-specific differences occur to some degree in primates, the general pattern is less dependent on body size, phylogeny and locomotor habitat than one might expect. The significant exceptions of Loridae and Colobinae may be related to the two groups' preference for quadruped climbing. A relatively short scapula probably facilitates forelimb excursions outside the parasagittal plane (e.g. reaching above the head). The secondarily dwarfed Callitrichidae have relatively longer shoulder blades and shorter forearms than other arboreal quadruped primates but don't revert to the forelimb proportions of the primarily small grey mouse lemurs.
|
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
How are small primates different from other small mammals in terms of limb geometry?
A condition of symmetrical tetrapod locomotion is that the proximal pivots
of fore- and hindlimbs are on the same level
(Kuznetsov, 1985
;
Fischer and Witte, 1998
). This
is also the case for the majority of quadruped mammals. Exceptions occur, for
example in chimpanzees, giraffes and hyenas, in which adaptations to other
locomotor modes or to non-locomotor activities are predominant. In mammals,
the level of the proximal limb pivots is not necessarily constant during the
support phase but can raise and fall synchronously in a pair of fore- and hind
limbs (Fig. 9), thus permitting
vertical oscillations of the centre of body mass that are essential for
whole-body mechanics (Cavagna et al.,
1977
; Biewener,
2006
; Biknevicius and Reilly,
2006
). Fore- and hindlimbs, thus, have the same functional length
regardless of differences in anatomical length. This guarantees that the limbs
move with the same step frequency and that the same step length is brought
about by the same angular excursion. As a result, it largely determines the
relationship between functional and anatomical limb length and, thus, the
adaptability of limb geometry to biomechanical demands through the adjustment
of limb segmentation and angulation. For primates displaying a specific
diagonal sequence gait, another crucial factor is the relationship between
limb length and body size because long limbs increase the risk of interference
between ipsilateral fore- and hindlimbs. Most primates have significantly
longer limbs relative to their body size than other mammals, except in the
case of the very small species which weigh less than 200 g. The anatomical
length differences between fore- and hindlimbs, however, remain similar to
those in other mammals, with an interlimb ratio of between 70 and 85 being
typical for smaller mammals in general. Hindlimbs, then, are always more
flexed than forelimbs. Interestingly, hindlimb lengthening in primates affects
neither intralimb proportions nor limb kinematics in the four species studied
here (Schmidt, 2005a
).
Hindlimb elongation is simply achieved through the proportional lengthening of
all three limb segments. Thus, limb lengthening has no effect on intralimb
proportions, limb excursion angle or limb kinematics.
Fig. 9 shows that the prosimian
primates and the small callitrichid New World monkeys share a similar hindlimb
posture with other mammals of their body size. In Cebidae (e.g. Saimiri
sciureus) and Cercopithecidae, hindlimb kinematics have changed in the
direction of a more erect limb posture. As a result of this very conservative
hindlimb geometry, the point of touchdown of the hind limb is shifted
cranially – and, thus, into the excursion sphere of the forelimb.
|
In the diagonal footfall sequence of primates, hindlimb touchdown is
followed by the touchdown of the contralateral forelimb
(Hildebrand, 1967
;
Tomita, 1967
). Moreover, the
ipsilateral forelimb is still on the ground when the hindfoot is positioned.
Primates can avoid interference between the ipsilateral limbs by overstriding
(Hildebrand, 1967
;
Larson and Stern, 1987
;
Demes et al., 1994
;
Wallace and Demes, 2007
). This
is very typical for many species when walking on the ground but it has been
less frequently observed during arboreal locomotion
(Wallace and Demes, 2007
).
Obviously, many primates avoid overstriding on arboreal substrates. Therefore,
limb interference has to be avoided by means of another strategy.
Arboreal primates avoid limb interference by a cranial shift of the
forelimb step (Fig. 10). They
display much greater asymmetry between the angles of protraction and
retraction. As the protraction angle increases, retraction decreases, with the
forelimb thus sacrificing part of its caudal excursion sphere to avoid
interference with the hindlimb. Total forelimb excursion, however, can thus
remain equal to hind limb excursion (Fig.
10). Larson (Larson,
1998
) has already proposed that forelimb protraction could be a
strategy to avoid limb interference – an assumption supported by the
present survey of both limb kinematics and limb proportions. A significantly
higher degree of forelimb protraction has been observed in those primates with
very long hindlimbs (e.g. Lemuridae). Species with short limbs (e.g. grey
mouse lemurs) do not display greater forelimb protraction than other small
mammals. This also applies to those arboreal marsupials that show certain
locomotor characteristics, which are convergent with primates. Although
Schmitt and Lemelin (Schmitt and Lemelin,
2002
) argued that the touchdown position of the forelimb of the
woolly opossum Caluromys philander is primate-like, the photographs
in their study and in Lemelin et al.
(Lemelin et al., 2003
) show
that it is quite similar to the forelimb position of tree-shrews
(Schilling and Fischer, 1999
),
with the hand placed right below the eye and the touchdown angle of the
humerus almost vertical. The majority of quadruped mammals place their
forefeet right below the eye, not for visual control but as a fixed point to
control the geometry of the touchdown position
(Fischer et al., 2002
). This
strategy makes the angle of attack of the centre of body mass very constant.
Some authors have explained this invariant angle as a mechanical parameter to
control limb stability (Fischer and
Blickhan, 2006
; Hackert et
al., 2006
).
|
From this comparative perspective, the question of why primates have
abandoned this strategy deserves attention and further discussion. Is the
`new' forelimb posture at touchdown really better adapted to the specific
demands of primate locomotion than the `old' one? One argument against this
assumption is that the extended and protracted forelimb of primates is more
susceptible to gravitational loading than the crouched posture of other
mammals as the substrate reaction force vector is far removed from the limb
joints (Biewener, 1983
;
Schmitt, 1999
;
Larney and Larson, 2004
;
Schmidt, 2005b
). Only the
ability of many primates to reduce the weight borne by the forelimb may help
to overcome this problem (Reynolds,
1985
). Those primate species that do not reduce forelimb loading
– Loridae (Ishida et al.,
1990
; Demes et al.,
1994
; Schmitt and Lemelin,
2004
) and Callitrichidae
(Schmitt, 2003
) –
display significant changes in the contractile properties of their forelimb
muscles (Schmidt and Leuchtweis,
2007
; Schmidt and Schilling,
2007
).
As some strategies of stabilizing the forelimb posture mechanically (e.g.
through an invariant touch down angle) have given way to a restrictive
footfall sequence combined with limb elongation, it might well be that the
observed changes in forelimb proportions reflect advanced mechanical
strategies to deal with the problem of limb instability. As a result of the
shift towards a (relatively speaking) shorter scapula and longer forearm,
forelimb proportions go from being symmetrical to being asymmetrical. Based on
numerical simulations, Seyfarth et al. suggested that the asymmetric
structuring of a three-segmented limb enhances the self-stability of movement
(Seyfarth et al., 2001
). The
hindlimb of mammals generally corroborates this hypothesis
(Seyfarth et al., 2001
;
Schmidt and Fischer, 2008
).
Whether the basic change in forelimb proportions in primates really enhances
limb stability, however, remains to be proven using mathematical
simulations.
Proposal of a hierarchical structure of dependencies in character evolution
As the smallest living primates, grey mouse lemurs have often been
suggested to be reliable models of the last common ancestor of primates
(Martin, 1972
;
Gebo, 2004
). In the present
study, it has been shown that grey mouse lemurs display exactly the same limb
geometries as other small mammals. Limbs are not elongated and move in a
crouched posture during the entire step cycle. However, grey mouse lemurs
differ from other small mammals in having powerful prehensile hindfeet. They
walk in a diagonal-sequence gait and they are able to shift weight dynamically
from the forelimbs to the hindlimbs (M.S., unpublished observations). As the
set of these three characters evolved convergently in arboreal mammals three
times at least, namely in primates
(Hildebrand, 1967
;
Martin, 1968
;
Kimura et al., 1979
;
Reynolds, 1985
), in some
marsupials (Goldfinch and Molnar,
1978
; Cartmill et al.,
2002
; Schmitt and Lemelin,
2002
; Cartmill et al.,
2008
) and in some carnivores
(Rollinson and Martin, 1981
;
Cartmill et al., 2007
), it is
plausible to assume that the characters not only coincide but are mutually
interdependent, as already suggested by several authors
(Rollinson and Martin, 1981
;
Cartmill et al., 2002
;
Schmitt and Lemelin, 2002
;
Lemelin et al., 2003
). The
reasons for these interdependencies have been discussed for many years but are
not yet completely understood.
Grasping feet have the unique capacity to produce moments about the
substrate axes, which can, in turn, be transmitted to the body, thus allowing
a dynamic weight shift from side to side
(Cartmill, 1985
;
Preuschoft, 2002
) or from the
forequarter to the rear (Witte et al.,
2002
; Schmidt,
2005b
). A consistent posterior weight shift does not occur if
forelimbs are equipped with the same capacity for powerful grasping and weight
shifts in any direction, as seems to be the case in Loridae
(Ishida et al., 1990
;
Schmitt and Lemelin, 2004
).
The production of moments requires forces to be exerted from more than one
point of the plantar surface onto the substrate. Moments can also be produced
on flat ground but the substrate reaction moments will be lower under these
conditions. Once powerful pedal grasping had evolved in primates, it could be
used to actively regulate the weight distribution between the limbs regardless
of the position of the centre of body mass
(Witte et al., 2002
). Only
under these circumstances was a change in the footfall sequence to hindlimb
contact prior to forelimb contact meaningful because it could reduce the
impact of touchdown of the forelimb. The moment the forelimb contacts the
support is perhaps one of the most critical phases in quadruped locomotion.
The forelimb normally carries the greatest part of the body mass because of
its closer proximity to the centre of body mass (e.g.
Demes et al., 1994
). As a
result, it is mainly the forelimb that has to redirect the body's vertical
velocity component from down to up. As the quality of the support cannot be
anticipated, however, secure contact cannot be guaranteed, especially in
smaller mammals. The adjustment of limb geometry to an obstacle or unstable
support is only possible after contact, not prior to it. Small mammals deal
easily with unexpected irregularities in the support and are highly adapted to
compensate for any disturbance in the trajectory of the centre of body mass
because of their permanent crouched limb posture
(Jenkins, 1974
;
Fischer et al., 2002
).
However, the dynamic weight shift mechanism of primates and some marsupials
allows them not only to react to but also avoid undesirable disturbances by
reducing the load carried by the forelimb.
Limb elongation relative to body size, one of the major adaptations to
leaping, appeared later in primate evolution
(Gebo, 2004
), at a time when
the trinity of grasping limbs, weight shift mechanism and diagonal sequence
gait was already established. Assuming that a diagonal footfall sequence makes
the posterior weight shift mechanism most effective and is therefore
indispensable, a change in limb geometry is, then, essential to avoid
interference between ipsilateral fore- and hindlimbs. The fact that only the
forelimb was affected by this change might be explained by the dominant role
of the hindlimb as the propulsive organ (e.g.
Demes et al., 1994
). Hindlimb
geometry seems to be optimized to fulfil this function and is, therefore, much
more conservative across mammals in general
(Schmidt and Fischer,
2008
).
Finally, it is important to emphasize that the proposed hierarchical
structure of dependencies in character evolution is assumed to be valid for
the evolutionary processes that produce these characters. The sometimes weaker
relationship between these characters in several primate taxa reflects the
multiple strategies `invented' by primates to overcome the problems and
constraints connected with the competition between initial walking adaptations
on terminal branches and successive adaptations to other locomotor modes such
as leaping in lemurs or acrobatic climbing in lorises. These constraints and
their solutions were the driving force behind primate locomotor evolution.
Once the transfer of moments by prehensile feet was part of the standard
locomotor repertoire, a gradual caudalization of the centre of body mass from
its anterior position in quadrupeds to a more posterior location, for example
in hominoids (Stern, 1976
;
Reynolds, 1985
;
Raichlen et al., 2007
), was
possible without any mechanical constraints. Once primates had learned to
stabilize the protracted and extended forelimb against disruptive forces, they
were able to use the forelimb to reach out and test the support, to increase
gait compliance and, of course, in many other locomotory and non-locomotory
functions as suggested by Larson (Larson,
1998
).
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Alexander, R. M. and Jayes, A. S. (1983). A dynamic similarity hypothesis for the gaits of quadrupedal mammals. J. Zool. (Lond.) 201,135 -152.
Alexander, R. M. and Maloiy, G. M. O. (1984). Stride length and stride frequencies of primates. J. Zool. (Lond.) 29,577 -582.
Alexander, R. M., Jayes, A. S., Maloiy, G. M. O. and Wathuta, E. M. (1979). Allometry of the limb bones of mammals from shrews (Sorex) to elephant (Loxodonta). J. Zool. (Lond.) 189,305 -314.
Arms, A., Voges, D., Fischer, M. S. and Preuschoft, H. (2002). Arboreal locomotion in small New World monkeys. Z. Morphol. Anthropol. 83,243 -263.[Medline]
Biewener, A. A. (1983). Allometry of
quadrupedal locomotion: the scaling of duty factor, bone curvature and limb
orientation to body size. J. Exp. Biol.
105,147
-171.
Biewener, A. A. (2005). Biomechanical
consequences of scaling. J. Exp. Biol.
208,1665
-1676.
Biewener, A. A. (2006). Patterns of mechanical energy change in tetrapod gait: pendula, springs and work. J. Exp. Zool. 305,899 -911.
Biknevicius, A. R. and Reilly, S. M. (2006). Correlation of symmetrical gaits and whole body mechanics: debunking myths in locomotor biodynamics. J. Exp. Zool. 305,923 -934.
Cartmill, M. (1972). Arboreal adaptations and the origin of the order primates. In Functional and Evolutionary Biology of Primates (ed. R. Tuttle), pp.97 -122. Chicago: Aldine Atherton.
Cartmill, M. (1974). Rethinking primate
origins. Science 184,436
-443.
Cartmill, M. (1985). Climbing. In Functional Vertebrate Morphology (ed. M. Hildebrand, D. M. Bramble, K. F. Liem and D. B. Wake), pp. 73-88. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Cartmill, M., Lemelin, P. and Schmitt, D. (2002). Support polygons and symmetrical gaits in mammals. Zool. J. Linn. Soc. 136,401 -420.[CrossRef]
Cartmill, M., Schmitt, D., Hartstone-Rose, A. and Lemelin, P. (2007). Explaining primate gaits: a carnivoran test case. Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 132, 84.
Cartmill, M., Schmitt, D., Lemelin, P., Cartmill, E. A. and Atkinson, C. D. (2008). Gait patterns in primates and marsupials: similarities and differences. Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 135,77 .
Cavagna, G. A., Heglund, N. C. and Taylor, C. R. (1977). Mechanical work in terrestrial locomotion: two basic mechanisms for minimizing energy expenditure. Am. J. Physiol. 233,R243 -R261.[Medline]
Demes, B., Jungers, W. L. and Nieschalk, U. (1990). Size- and speed-related aspects of quadrupedal walking in slender and slow lorises. In Gravity, Posture and Locomotion in Primates (ed. F. K. Jouffroy, M. H. Stack and C. Niemitz), pp.175 -197. Florence: Il Sedicesimo.
Demes, B., Larson, S. G., Stern, J. T., Jr, Jungers, W. L., Biknevicius, A. R. and Schmitt, D. (1994). The kinetics of primate quadrupedalism: `hindlimb drive' reconsidered. J. Hum. Evol. 26,353 -374.[CrossRef]
Fischer, M. S. (1994). Crouched posture and high fulcrum: a principle in the locomotion of small mammals: the example of the rock hyrax (Procavia capensis) (Mammalia: Hyracoidea). J. Hum. Evol. 26,501 -524.[CrossRef]
Fischer, M. S. and Blickhan, R. (2006). The tri-segmented limbs of therian mammals: kinematics, dynamics, and self-stabilization. J. Exp. Zool. 305,935 -952.
Fischer, M. S. and Witte, H. (1998). The functional morphology of the three-segmented limb of mammals and its specialities in small and medium-sized mammals. In Proceedings of the European Mechanics Colloquium, Euromech 375, Biology and Technology of Walking, pp. 10-17. München: Technical University of Munich.
Fischer, M. S., Schilling, N., Schmidt, M., Haarhaus, D. and
Witte, H. (2002). Basic limb kinematics of small therian
mammals. J. Exp. Biol.
205,1315
-1338.
Fleagle, J. G. (1999). Primate Adaptation and Evolution. San Diego, CA: Academic Press.
Garber, P. A. (1980). Locomotor behavior and feeding ecology of the Panamanian tamarin (Saguinus oedipus geoffroyi, Callitrichidae, Primates). Int. J. Primatol. 1,185 -201.[CrossRef]
Garbutt, N. (1999). Mammals of Madagascar. New Haven: Yale University Press.
Gebo, D. L. (2004). A shrew-sized origin for primates. Yearb. Phys. Anthropol. 47, 40-62.
Goldfinch, A. J. and Molnar, R. E. (1978). Gait of the brush-tailed possum (Trichosurus vulpecula). Aust. Zool. 19,277 -289.
Goslow, G. E., Jr, Seeherman, H. J., Taylor, C. R., McCutchin, M. N. and Heglund, N. C. (1980). Electrical activity and relative length changes of dog limb muscles as a function of speed and gait. J. Exp. Biol. 94,15 -42.
Gould, S. T. and Lewontin, R. C. (1979). The spandrels of San Marco and the Panglossian paradigm: a critique of the adaptationist programme. Proc. R. Soc. Lond., B. Biol. Sci. 205,581 -598.[Medline]
Gray, J. (1944). Studies in the mechanics of
the tetrapod skeleton. J. Exp. Biol.
20, 88-116.
Grzimek, B. (1987). Enzyklopädie der Säugetiere (ed. R. Kleienburg). München: Kindler Verlag.
Hackert, R., Schilling, N. and Fischer, M. S. (2006). Mechanical self-stabilization, a working hypothesis for the study of the evolution of body proportions in terrestrial mammals? Comptes Rendus Palevol. 5, 541-549.[CrossRef]
Hildebrand, M. (1967). Symmetrical gaits of primates. Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 26,119 -130.[CrossRef]
Hochberg, Y. (1974). Some generalizations of the T-method in simultaneous inference. J. Multivar. Anal. 4,224 -234.[CrossRef]
Ishida, H., Jouffroy, F. K. and Nakano, Y. (1990). Comparative dynamics of pronograde and upside down horizontal quadrupedalism in the slow loris (Nycticebus coucang). In Gravity, Posture and Locomotion in Primates (ed. F. K. Jouffroy, M. H. Stack and C. Niemitz), pp. 209-220. Florence: Il Sedicesimo.
Isler, K. and Grüter, C. C. (2005). Arboreal locomotion in wild black-and-white snub-nosed monkeys (Rhinopithecus bieti). Folia Primatol. 77,195 -211.[CrossRef]
Jenkins, F. A., Jr (1971). Limb posture and locomotion in the Virginia opossum (Didelphis marsupialis) and in other non-cursorial mammals. J. Zool. (Lond.) 165,303 -315.
Jenkins, F. A., Jr (1974). Tree shrew locomotion and the origins of primate arborealism. In Primate Locomotion (ed. F. A. Jenkins, Jr), pp.85 -115. New York: Academic Press.
Jenkins, F. A., Jr and Camazine, S. M. (1977). Hip structure and locomotion in ambulatory and cursorial carnivores. J. Zool. (Lond.) 181,351 -370.
Kimura, T., Okada, M. and Ishida, H. (1979). Kinesiological characteristics of primate walking: its significance in human walking. In Environment, Behavior, and Morphology: Dynamic Interactions in Primates (ed. M. E. Morbeck, H. Preuschoft and N. Gomberg), pp. 297-311. New York: Gustav Fischer.
Kuhtz-Buschbeck, J. P., Boczek-Funke, A., Illert, M. and Weinhardt, G. (1994). X-ray study of the cat hindlimb during treadmill locomotion. Eur. J. Neurosci. 6,1187 -1198.[CrossRef][Medline]
Kuznetsov, A. N. (1985). Comparative functional analysis of the fore- and hind limbs in mammals. Zool. J. Moscow 64,1862 -1867.
Lammers, A. R. and German, R. Z. (2002). Ontogenetic allometry in the locomotor skeleton of specialized half-bounding mammals. J. Zool. (Lond.) 258,485 -495.[CrossRef]
Larney, E. and Larson, S. G. (2004). Compliant walking in primates: elbow and knee yield in primates compared to other mammals. Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 125, 42-50.[CrossRef][Medline]
Larson, S. G. (1998). Unique aspects of quadrupedal locomotion in nonhuman primates. In Primate Locomotion: Recent Advances (ed. E. Strasser, J. Fleagle, A. Rosenberger and H. McHenry), pp. 157-173. New York: Plenum Press.
Larson, S. G. and Stern, J. T., Jr (1987). EMG of chimpanzee shoulder muscles during knuckle-walking: problems of terrestrial locomotion in a suspensory adapted primate. J. Zool. (Lond.) 212,629 -655.
Larson, S. G., Schmitt, D., Lemelin, P. and Hamrick, M. (2000). Uniqueness of primate forelimb posture during quadrupedal locomotion. Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 112,87 -101.[CrossRef][Medline]
Larson, S. G., Schmitt, D., Lemelin, P. and Hamrick, M. (2001). Limb excursion during quadrupedal walking: how do primates compare to other mammals? J. Zool. (Lond.) 255,353 -365.[CrossRef]
Le Gros Clark, W. E. (1959). The Antecedents of Man: An Introduction to the Evolution of the Primates. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
Lemelin, P., Schmitt, D. and Cartmill, M. (2003). Footfall patterns and interlimb co-ordination in opossums (Family Didelphidae): evidence for the evolution of diagonal-sequence walking gaits in primates. J. Zool. (Lond.) 260,423 -429.[CrossRef]
Martin, R. D. (1968). Towards a new definition of primates. Man 3,377 -401.[CrossRef]
Martin, R. D. (1972). A preliminary field study of the lesser mouse lemur (Microcebus murinus J. F. Miller 1777). In Behaviour and Ecology of Nocturnal Prosimians (ed. P. Charles-Dominique and R. D. Martin), pp. 43-89. Berlin: Verlag Paul Parey.
Martin, R. D. (1986). Primates: a definition. In Major Topics in Primate and Human Evolution (ed. B. Wood, L. Martin and P. Andrews), pp. 1-31. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
McCrossin, M. L., Benefit, B. R., Gitau, S. N., Palmer, A. K. and Blue, K. T. (1998). Fossil evidence for the origins of terrestriality among Old World higher primates. In Primate Locomotion. Recent Advances (ed. E. Strasser, J. G. Fleagle, A. Rosenberger and H. McHenry), pp. 353-396. New York: Plenum Press.
Meldrum, D. J. (1991). Kinematics of the cercopithecine foot on arboreal and terrestrial substrates with implications for the interpretation of hominid terrestrial adaptations. Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 84,273 -289.[CrossRef][Medline]
Morbeck, M. E. (1979). Forelimb use and positional adaptation in Colobus guereza: integration of behavioral, ecological, and anatomical data. In Environment, Behavior and Morphology: Dynamic Interactions in Primates (ed. M. E. Morbeck, H. Preuschoft and N. Gomberg), pp. 95-117. Stuttgart: Gustav Fischer Verlag.
Napier, J. R. (1963). Brachiation and brachiators. Symp. Zool. Soc. Lond. 10, 183-195. ISSN: 0084-5612.
Napier, J. R. (1967). Evolutionary aspects of primate locomotion. Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 27,333 -342.[CrossRef][Medline]
Nowak, R. M. (1999). Walker's Mammals of the World. 6th edn. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
Preuschoft, H. (2002). What does "arboreal locomotion" mean exactly and what are the relationships between `climbing', environment and morphology? Z. Morphol. Anthropol. 83,171 -188.[Medline]
Raichlen, D. and Shapiro, L. (2007). The evolution of mammalian locomotor mechanics: adaptations or spandrels? J. Morph. 268,1122 .
Raichlen, D., Pontzer, H. and Sockol, M. D. (2007). Joint kinetics in chimpanzees and other mammals: are large bodied primates unique? Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 132, 194.
Rasmussen, D. T. (1990). Primate origins: lessons from a neotropical marsupial. Am. J. Primatol. 22,263 -277.[CrossRef]
Reynolds, T. R. (1985). Mechanics of increased support of weight by the hindlimbs in primates. Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 67,335 -349.[CrossRef][Medline]
Reynolds, T. R. (1987). Stride length and its determinants in humans, early hominids, primates, and mammals. In Primate Locomotion (ed. F. A. Jenkins, Jr), pp.171 -200. New York: Academic Press.
Rollinson, J. and Martin, R. D. (1981). Comparative aspects of primate locomotion, with special reference to arboreal cercopithecines. Symp. Zool. Soc. Lond. 48, 377-427. ISSN: 0084-5612.
Rose, M. D. (1973). Quadrupedalism in primates. Primates 14,337 -358.[CrossRef]
Rowe, N. (1996). The Pictorial Guide to the Living Primates. Charlestown: Pogonias Press.
Sargis, E. J., Boyer, D. M., Bloch, J. I. and Silcox, M. T. (2007). Evolution of pedal grasping in primates. J. Hum. Evol. 53,103 -107.[CrossRef][Medline]
Schilling, N. and Fischer, M. S. (1999). Kinematic analysis of treadmill locomotion of tree shrews, Tupaia glis (Scandentia: Tupaiidae). Z. Säugetierkd. 64,129 -153.
Schilling, N. and Petrovitch, A. (2005). Postnatal allometry of the skeleton in Tupaia glis (Scandentia: Tupaiidae) and Galea musteloides (Rodentia: Caviidae) – A test of the three-segment limb hypothesis. Zoology 109,148 -163.[CrossRef]
Schmidt, M. (2005a). Hind limb proportions and
kinematics: are small primates different from other small mammals?
J. Exp. Biol. 208,3367
-3383.
Schmidt, M. (2005b). Quadrupedal locomotion in squirrel monkeys (Cebidae: Saimiri sciureus) – a cineradiographic study of limb kinematics and related substrate reaction forces. Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 128,359 -370.[CrossRef][Medline]
Schmidt, M. and Leuchtweis, J. (2007). Contractile properties of limb muscles in the slender loris (Primates: Loris tardigradus) related to climbing performance. J. Morph. 268,1131 .
Schmidt, M. and Schilling, N. (2007). Fiber type distribution in the shoulder muscles of tree shrews, cotton-top tamarins, and squirrel monkeys related to shoulder movements and forelimb loading. J. Hum. Evol. 52,401 -419.[CrossRef][Medline]
Schmidt, M. and Fischer. M. S. (2008). Morphological integration in mammalian limb proportions: dissociation between function and development. Evol. (in press).
Schmitt, D. (1999). Compliant walking in primates. J. Zool. (Lond.) 248,149 -160.[CrossRef]
Schmitt, D. (2003). Evolutionary implications of the unusual walking mechanics of the common marmoset (C. jacchus). Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 122, 28-37.[CrossRef][Medline]
Schmitt, D. and Larson, S. (1995). Heel contact as a function of substrate type and speed in primates. Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 96,39 -50.[CrossRef][Medline]
Schmitt, D. and Lemelin, P. (2002). Origins of primate locomotion: gait mechanics of the woolly opossum. Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 118,231 -238.[CrossRef][Medline]
Schmitt, D. and Lemelin, P. (2004). Locomotor mechanics of the slender loris (Loris tardigradus). J. Hum. Evol. 47,85 -94.[CrossRef][Medline]
Seyfarth, A., Günther, M. and Blickhan, R. (2001). Stable operation of an elastic three-segment leg. Biol. Cybern. 84,365 -382.[CrossRef][Medline]
Shapiro, L. J. and Raichlen, D. (2005). Lateral sequence walking in infant Papio cynocephalus: implications for the evolution of diagonal sequence walking in primates. Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 126,205 -213.[CrossRef][Medline]
Sokal, R. R. and Rohlf, F. J. (1995).Biometry: The Principles and Practice of Statistics in Biological Research, 3rd edn. San Francisco: W. H. Freeman.
Soligo, C. and Martin, R. D. (2006). Adaptive origins of primates revisited. J. Hum. Evol. 50,414 -430.[CrossRef][Medline]
Stern, J. T., Jr (1976). Before bipedality. Yearb. Phys. Anthropol. 20, 59-68.[CrossRef]
Steudel, K. (1982). Patterns of intraspecific and interspecific allometry in Old World primates. Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 59,419 -430.[CrossRef][Medline]
Sussman, R. W. (1991). Primate origins and the evolution of angiosperms. Am. J. Primatol. 23,209 -223.[CrossRef]
Tomita, M. (1967). A study on the movement patterns of four limbs in walking. 1. Observation and discussion on the two types of the movement order of four limbs seen in mammals while walking. J. Anthropol. Soc. Nippon 75,120 -146.
Walker, A. C. (1979). Prosimian locomotor behavior. In The Study of Prosimian Behavior (ed. G. A. Doyle and R. D. Martin), pp. 543-565. New York: Academic Press.
Wallace, I. J. and Demes, B. (2007). Symmetrical gaits of Cebus apella: implications for the functional significance of diagonal sequence gait in primates. J. Hum. Evol. 54,783 -794.[CrossRef][Medline]
Wayne, R. K. (1986). Limb morphology of domestic and wild canids: the influence of development on morphologic change. J. Morphol. 187,301 -319.[CrossRef][Medline]
Whitehead, P. F. and Larson, S. G. (1994). Shoulder motion during quadrupedal walking in Cercopithecus aethiops: intergration of cineradiography and electromyographic data. J. Hum. Evol. 26,525 -544.[CrossRef]
Witte, H., Preuschoft, H. and Fischer, M. S. (2002). The importance of the evolutionary heritage of locomotion on flat ground in small mammals for the development of arboreality. Z. Morphol. Anthropol. 83, 1-13.
![]()
CiteULike
Complore
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Reddit
Technorati
Twitter What's this?
Related articles in JEB:
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
K. Phillips SMALL PRIMATES ARE UNIQUE FOR THEIR SIZE J. Exp. Biol., December 15, 2008; 211(24): ii - ii. [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||