Hens Samantha M
Department of Anthropology, California State University, Sacramento, CA 95819-6106, USA.
Am J Primatol. 2005 Feb;65(2):149-66. doi: 10.1002/ajp.20105.
The orangutan is widely recognized as a highly dimorphic species. An ontogenetic approach to the study of sexual dimorphism can assist researchers in understanding both where and when these differences develop. In this study, 357 orangutans from Borneo were divided into five developmental stages representing infancy to mature adulthood. Three-dimensional (3D) coordinate data from 16 landmarks representing the face and palate were analyzed by means of a Euclidean distance matrix analysis (EDMA), a quantitative method for the comparison of forms. Three separate analyses (an age-specific static comparison of forms, a sex-specific analysis of growth trajectories, and an intersex comparison of patterns of relative growth) were carried out with the intent to describe the rate, timing, magnitude, and pattern of growth in the orangutan face and palate. The results indicate that generally males and females share a similar, but not identical, pattern of growth or local form change, but differ in growth rate, timing, and magnitude of difference. Dimorphism in the face and palate can be localized in infancy and traced throughout all age intervals. Orangutan females grow slightly faster than males from infancy to adolescence, at which time male growth exceeds female growth. Female growth ceases with the advent of adulthood, while male growth continues (i.e., both the number and magnitude of the dimorphic dimensions increase). Males and females are similar in facial dimensions and growth related to the orbits, upper face, and palate width. They maintain these similarities throughout development. However, they differ in facial and nasal height, palate length, snout projection, depth of the nasopharynx, and hafting of the face onto the skull. The face broadens and the zygomatic bone flares dramatically in adult males, corresponding to the development of cheek pads. While growth patterns are similar between the two sexes, they differ in the lateral orbit, snout projection, and hafting of the face onto the cranium. Adult dimorphism is the result of growth patterns experienced throughout life, and it is not equally expressed across the cranium. An understanding of patterns of dimorphism, along with the magnitude of difference, may be helpful for interpreting dimorphism in the fossil record.
红毛猩猩被广泛认为是一种两性异形程度很高的物种。采用个体发育学方法研究两性异形有助于研究人员了解这些差异在何处以及何时出现。在本研究中,来自婆罗洲的357只红毛猩猩被分为代表婴儿期到成年期的五个发育阶段。通过欧几里得距离矩阵分析(EDMA),一种用于形态比较的定量方法,对代表面部和腭部的16个地标点的三维(3D)坐标数据进行了分析。进行了三项独立分析(特定年龄的形态静态比较、生长轨迹的性别特异性分析以及相对生长模式的两性间比较),旨在描述红毛猩猩面部和腭部的生长速率、时间、幅度和模式。结果表明,一般来说,雄性和雌性具有相似但不完全相同的生长模式或局部形态变化,但在生长速率、时间和差异幅度上有所不同。面部和腭部的两性异形在婴儿期就可以定位,并贯穿所有年龄阶段。从婴儿期到青春期,雌性红毛猩猩的生长速度略快于雄性,到那时雄性的生长速度超过雌性。随着成年期的到来,雌性的生长停止,而雄性的生长继续(即两性异形维度的数量和幅度都增加)。雄性和雌性在与眼眶、上半脸和腭宽相关的面部尺寸和生长方面相似。它们在整个发育过程中都保持这些相似性。然而,它们在面部和鼻高、腭长、吻部突出、鼻咽深度以及面部与颅骨的附着方面存在差异。成年雄性的面部变宽,颧骨显著扩张,这与颊垫的发育相对应。虽然两性的生长模式相似,但它们在外侧眼眶、吻部突出以及面部与颅骨的附着方面存在差异。成年两性异形是一生所经历的生长模式的结果,并且在整个颅骨上的表现并不相同。了解两性异形模式以及差异幅度可能有助于解释化石记录中的两性异形现象。