Taylor Andrea B
Department of Community and Family Medicine, Duke University School of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710, USA.
J Hum Evol. 2005 Jun;48(6):555-74. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2005.01.003.
A number of researchers have suggested a functional relationship between dietary variation and temporomandibular joint (TMJ) morphology, yet few studies have evaluated TMJ form in the African apes. In this study, I compare TMJ morphology in adults and during ontogeny in Gorilla (G.g. beringei, G.g. graueri, and G.g. gorilla) and Pan (P. paniscus, P. troglodytes troglodytes, P.t. schweinfurthii, and P.t. verus). I test two hypotheses: first, compared to all other African apes, G.g. beringei exhibits TMJ morphologies that would be predicted for a primate that consumes a diet comprised primarily of moderately to very tough, leafy vegetation; and second, all gorillas exhibit the same predicted morphologies compared to Pan. Compared to all adult African apes, G.g. beringei has higher rami and condyles positioned further above the occlusal plane of the mandible, relative to jaw length. Thus, mountain gorillas have the potential to generate relatively more muscle force, more evenly distribute occlusal forces along the postcanine teeth, and generate relatively greater jaw adductor moment. G.g. beringei also exhibits relatively wider mandibular condyles, suggesting these folivorous apes are able to resist relatively greater compressive loads along the lateral and/or medial aspect of the condyle. All gorillas likewise exhibit these same shape differences compared to Pan. These morphological responses are the predicted consequences of intensification of folivory and, as such, provide support for functional hypotheses linking these TMJ morphologies to degree of folivory. The African apes to not, however, demonstrate a systematic pattern of divergence in relative condylar area as a function of intensification of folivory. The ontogenetic trajectories for gorillas are significantly elevated above those of Pan, and to a lesser but still significant degree, mountain gorillas similarly deviate from lowland gorillas (G.g. gorilla and G.g. graueri). Thus, adult shape differences in ramal and condylar heights do not result from the simple extrapolation of common growth allometries relative to jaw length. As such, they are suggestive of an adaptive shift towards a tougher, more folivorous diet. However, the allometric patterning for condylar area and condylar width does not systematically conform to predictions based on dietary specialization. Thus, while differences in condylar shapes may confer functional advantages both during growth and as adults, there is no evidence to suggest selection for altered condylar proportions, independent of the effects of changes in jaw size.
一些研究人员提出饮食变化与颞下颌关节(TMJ)形态之间存在功能关系,但很少有研究评估非洲猿类的颞下颌关节形态。在本研究中,我比较了大猩猩(山地大猩猩、东方大猩猩指名亚种、东方大猩猩克氏亚种)和黑猩猩(倭黑猩猩、黑猩猩指名亚种、黑猩猩施氏亚种、黑猩猩平脸亚种)成体以及个体发育过程中的颞下颌关节形态。我检验了两个假设:第一,与所有其他非洲猿类相比,山地大猩猩的颞下颌关节形态符合以主要食用中度至非常坚韧的多叶植被的灵长类动物所预测的形态;第二,与黑猩猩相比,所有大猩猩都表现出相同的预测形态。与所有成年非洲猿类相比,山地大猩猩的下颌支更高,髁突相对于下颌长度位于下颌咬合平面上方更远的位置。因此,山地大猩猩有可能产生相对更大的肌肉力量,更均匀地沿着后犬齿分布咬合力,并产生相对更大的颌内收力矩。山地大猩猩还表现出相对更宽的下颌髁突,表明这些食叶猿能够抵抗沿髁突外侧和/或内侧的相对更大的压缩负荷。与黑猩猩相比,所有大猩猩同样表现出这些相同的形状差异。这些形态学反应是食叶行为强化的预期结果,因此为将这些颞下颌关节形态与食叶程度联系起来的功能假设提供了支持。然而,非洲猿类并没有表现出相对髁突面积随食叶行为强化而系统变化的模式。大猩猩的个体发育轨迹明显高于黑猩猩,并且在较小但仍显著的程度上,山地大猩猩同样偏离低地大猩猩(西部大猩猩和东部大猩猩克氏亚种)。因此,下颌支和髁突高度的成年形状差异并非简单地由相对于下颌长度的共同生长异速生长推断而来。因此,它们暗示了向更坚韧、更多叶的饮食的适应性转变。然而,髁突面积和髁突宽度的异速生长模式并没有系统地符合基于饮食特化的预测。因此,虽然髁突形状的差异在生长期间和成年期可能都具有功能优势,但没有证据表明存在对髁突比例改变的选择,这与下颌大小变化的影响无关。