César J, Bicca-Marques J C
Department of Anthropology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 109 Davenport Hall, Urbana, IL 61801, USA.
J Hum Evol. 1999 Apr;36(4):349-78. doi: 10.1006/jhev.1998.0272.
Hand morphology in callitrichines (i.e., tamarins, marmosets, and Goeldi's monkey) is correlated with positional and foraging behaviors. This study examines hand shape in callitrichines using an allometric approach. It addresses a series of questions relating hand anatomy, insect foraging behavior, and resource partitioning in callitrichines. The main questions are: 1. Do the hands of Leontopithecus differ in shape from all other callitrichine taxa allowing it to perform highly manipulative prey foraging behaviors? 2. Are the hands of Saguinus fuscicollis adapted to manipulative foraging, and are they functionally similar to Leontopithecus' hands? 3. Is hand morphology in S. fuscicollis more similar to the hand morphology of sympatric tamarin species with whom it does not form mixed species troops (S. nigricollis and S. tripartitus) than to those sympatric tamarin species with whom it does form mixed troops (S. mystax, S. labiatus, and S. imperator)? Measurements of hand length (HL), width (HW), and thickness (HT) were taken from 1350 museum specimens of callitrichines (Callithrix, Cebuella, Leontopithecus, Saguinus, and Callimico), squirrel monkeys (Saimiri), and owl monkeys (Aotus). The analysis indicates that hand shape covaries with foraging strategy. Specifically, the hands of Leontopithecus are adapted for manipulative foraging and are relatively longer and more slender than the hands of other callitrichines. A similar pattern is observed in the hands of S. fuscicollis, S. tripartitus and S. nigricollis. These latter species, however, differ significantly in shape from all other tamarin species. Large differences in hand morphology are observed among tamarin species that form mixed-species troops. These anatomical differences may permit resource partitioning and coexistence among these closely related taxa. Hand shape, expressed as log HLGM (logged hand length divided by the geometric mean of all measurements), is a good predictor of manipulative and non-manipulative prey foraging techniques employed by callitrichines.
绢毛猴(即狨猴、柽柳猴和戈尔迪狨)的手部形态与姿势和觅食行为相关。本研究采用异速生长法研究绢毛猴的手形。它探讨了一系列与绢毛猴的手部解剖结构、昆虫觅食行为和资源分配相关的问题。主要问题如下:1. 狮面狨的手在形状上是否与所有其他绢毛猴类群不同,从而使其能够进行高度灵活的猎物觅食行为?2. 白领伶猴的手是否适应了灵活觅食,其功能是否与狮面狨的手相似?3. 白领伶猴的手部形态与同域分布但不与其组成混合物种群的狨猴物种(黑颈伶猴和三色伶猴)的手部形态相比,是否比与其组成混合群的同域狨猴物种(髭狨、唇齿狨和帝王狨)更相似?从1350份绢毛猴(狨属、侏狨属、狮面狨属、伶猴属和中美狨属)、松鼠猴(松鼠猴属)和夜猴(夜猴属)的博物馆标本中测量了手长(HL)、宽度(HW)和厚度(HT)。分析表明,手形与觅食策略共同变化。具体而言,狮面狨的手适应于灵活觅食,并且比其他绢毛猴的手相对更长、更纤细。在白领伶猴、三色伶猴和黑颈伶猴的手中也观察到类似模式。然而,后几种物种在形状上与所有其他狨猴物种有显著差异。在形成混合物种群的狨猴物种之间观察到手部形态的巨大差异。这些解剖学差异可能允许这些密切相关的类群进行资源分配和共存。以log HLGM(手长对数除以所有测量值的几何平均值)表示的手形,是绢毛猴采用的灵活和非灵活猎物觅食技术的良好预测指标。