Schrein Caitlin M
School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Institute of Human Origins, Arizona State University, P.O. Box 874101, Tempe, AZ 85287-4101, USA.
J Hum Evol. 2006 Apr;50(4):460-8. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2005.11.007. Epub 2006 Jan 18.
The fossil sample attributed to the late Miocene hominoid taxon Ouranopithecus macedoniensis is characterized by a high degree of dental metric variation. As a result, some researchers support a multiple-species taxonomy for this sample. Other researchers do not think that the sample variation is too great to be accommodated within one species. This study examines variation and sexual dimorphism in mandibular canine and postcanine dental metrics of an Ouranopithecus sample. Bootstrapping (resampling with replacement) of extant hominoid dental metric data is performed to test the hypothesis that the coefficients of variation (CV) and the indices of sexual dimorphism (ISD) of the fossil sample are not significantly different from those of modern great apes. Variation and sexual dimorphism in Ouranopithecus M(1) dimensions were statistically different from those of all extant ape samples; however, most of the dental metrics of Ouranopithecus were neither more variable nor more sexually dimorphic than those of Gorilla and Pongo. Similarly high levels of mandibular molar variation are known to characterize other fossil hominoid species. The Ouranopithecus specimens are morphologically homogeneous and it is probable that all but one specimen included in this study are from a single population. It is unlikely that the sample includes specimens of two sympatric large-bodied hominoid species. For these reasons, a single-species hypothesis is not rejected for the Ouranopithecus macedoniensis material. Correlations between mandibular first molar tooth size dimorphism and body size dimorphism indicate that O. macedoniensis and other extinct hominoids were more sexually size dimorphic than any living great apes, which suggests that social behaviors and life history profiles of these species may have been different from those of living species.
归因于晚中新世类人猿分类单元马其顿山猿的化石样本,其特征是牙齿测量数据存在高度变异。因此,一些研究人员支持对该样本采用多物种分类法。另一些研究人员则认为,样本变异程度不至于大到无法归入一个物种。本研究考察了一个山猿样本下颌犬齿和犬齿后牙齿测量数据的变异及两性异形情况。对现存类人猿牙齿测量数据进行自展法(有放回重抽样),以检验以下假设:化石样本的变异系数(CV)和两性异形指数(ISD)与现代大型猿类的变异系数和两性异形指数没有显著差异。山猿M(1)尺寸的变异和两性异形在统计学上与所有现存猿类样本不同;然而,山猿的大多数牙齿测量数据在变异性和两性异形方面并不比大猩猩和红毛猩猩的更显著。已知其他化石类人猿物种也具有类似的高水平下颌磨牙变异。山猿标本在形态上是同质的,本研究中除一个标本外的所有标本很可能都来自单一群体。该样本不太可能包含两个同域分布的大型类人猿物种的标本。基于这些原因,马其顿山猿材料的单物种假设未被否定。下颌第一磨牙牙齿大小两性异形与体型两性异形之间的相关性表明,马其顿山猿和其他已灭绝的类人猿在体型上的两性异形比任何现存的大型猿类都更显著,这表明这些物种的社会行为和生活史特征可能与现存物种不同。