Green David J, Gordon Adam D, Richmond Brian G
Center for the Advanced Study of Hominid Paleobiology, Department of Anthropology, The George Washington University, 2110 G St. NW, Washington, DC 20052, USA.
J Hum Evol. 2007 Feb;52(2):187-200. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2006.09.001. Epub 2006 Sep 8.
Previous analyses have suggested that Australopithecus africanus possessed more apelike limb proportions than Australopithecus afarensis. However, due to the errors involved in estimating limb length and body size, support for this conclusion has been limited. In this study, we use a new Monte Carlo method to (1) test the hypothesis that A. africanus had greater upper:lower limb-size proportions than A. afarensis and (2) assess the statistical significance of interspecific differences among these taxa, extant apes, and humans. Our Monte Carlo method imposes sampling constraints that reduce extant ape and human postcranial measurements to sample sizes comparable to the fossil samples. Next, composite ratios of fore- and hindlimb geometric means are calculated for resampled measurements from the fossils and comparative taxa. Mean composite ratios are statistically indistinguishable (alpha=0.05) from the actual ratios of extant individuals, indicating that this method conserves each sample's central tendency. When applied to the fossil samples, upper:lower limb-size proportions in A. afarensis are similar to those of humans (p=0.878) and are significantly different from all great ape proportions (p< or =0.034), while Australopithecus africanus is more similar to the apes (p> or =0.180) and significantly different from humans and A. afarensis (p< or =0.031). These results strongly support the hypothesis that A. africanus possessed more apelike limb-size proportions than A. afarensis, suggesting that A. africanus either evolved from a more postcranially primitive ancestor than A. afarensis or that the more apelike limb-size proportions of A. africanus were secondarily derived from an A. afarensis-like ancestor. Among the extant taxa, limb-size proportions correspond with observed levels of forelimb- and hindlimb-dominated positional behaviors. In conjunction with detailed anatomical features linked to arboreality, these results suggest that arboreal posture and locomotion may have been more important components of the A. africanus behavioral repertoire relative to that of A. afarensis.
以往的分析表明,与阿法南方古猿相比,非洲南方古猿的四肢比例更像猿类。然而,由于在估计肢体长度和身体大小方面存在误差,这一结论的支持力度有限。在本研究中,我们使用一种新的蒙特卡洛方法来:(1)检验非洲南方古猿的上肢与下肢大小比例大于阿法南方古猿这一假设;(2)评估这些分类群、现存猿类和人类之间种间差异的统计显著性。我们的蒙特卡洛方法施加了抽样限制,将现存猿类和人类的颅后测量数据减少到与化石样本相当的样本量。接下来,计算化石和比较分类群重新采样测量的前肢和后肢几何平均值的复合比率。平均复合比率与现存个体的实际比率在统计学上无显著差异(α = 0.05),表明该方法保留了每个样本的中心趋势。当应用于化石样本时,阿法南方古猿的上肢与下肢大小比例与人类相似(p = 0.878),且与所有大型猿类的比例显著不同(p≤0.034),而非洲南方古猿与猿类更相似(p≥0.180),且与人类和阿法南方古猿显著不同(p≤0.031)。这些结果有力地支持了非洲南方古猿的四肢大小比例比阿法南方古猿更像猿类这一假设,这表明非洲南方古猿要么是从比阿法南方古猿颅后更原始的祖先进化而来,要么是非洲南方古猿更像猿类的四肢大小比例是从类似阿法南方古猿的祖先那里次生演化而来。在现存分类群中,四肢大小比例与观察到的以前肢和后肢为主的定位行为水平相对应。结合与树栖性相关的详细解剖特征,这些结果表明,相对于阿法南方古猿,树栖姿势和运动可能在非洲南方古猿的行为模式中是更重要的组成部分。