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大狐猴(Daubentonia madagascariensis)的手脚压力揭示了在脆弱的指头上行走所需的新型生物力学权衡。

Hand and foot pressures in the aye-aye (Daubentonia madagascariensis) reveal novel biomechanical trade-offs required for walking on gracile digits.

机构信息

Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University, Box 90383, Durham, NC 27708, USA.

出版信息

J Exp Biol. 2010 May;213(Pt 9):1549-57. doi: 10.1242/jeb.040014.

Abstract

Arboreal animals with prehensile hands must balance the complex demands of bone strength, grasping and manipulation. An informative example of this problem is that of the aye-aye (Daubentonia madagascariensis), a rare lemuriform primate that is unusual in having exceptionally long, gracile fingers specialized for foraging. In addition, they are among the largest primates to engage in head-first descent on arboreal supports, a posture that should increase loads on their gracile digits. We test the hypothesis that aye-ayes will reduce pressure on their digits during locomotion by curling their fingers off the substrate. This hypothesis was tested using simultaneous videographic and pressure analysis of the hand, foot and digits for five adult aye-ayes during horizontal locomotion and during ascent and descent on a 30 degrees instrumented runway. Aye-ayes consistently curled their fingers during locomotion on all slopes. When the digits were in contact with the substrate, pressures were negligible and significantly less than those experienced by the palm or pedal digits. In addition, aye-ayes lifted their hands vertically off the substrate instead of 'toeing-off' and descended head-first at significantly slower speeds than on other slopes. Pressure on the hand increased during head-first descent relative to horizontal locomotion but not as much as the pressure increased on the foot during ascent. This distribution of pressure suggests that aye-ayes shift their weight posteriorly during head-first descent to reduce loads on their gracile fingers. This research demonstrates several novel biomechanical trade-offs to deal with complex functional demands on the mammalian skeleton.

摘要

树栖动物需要用手抓握,因此必须平衡骨骼强度、抓握和操作的复杂需求。这个问题在指猴(Daubentonia madagascariensis)身上体现得尤为明显,它是一种罕见的灵长类动物,手指非常长而纤细,专门用于觅食。此外,指猴是在树枝上用头朝下的姿势下降的最大的灵长类动物之一,这种姿势应该会增加它们纤细手指的负荷。我们测试了一个假设,即指猴在运动过程中会通过弯曲手指离开地面来减轻手指上的压力。这个假设是通过对五只成年指猴在水平运动以及在 30 度倾斜的仪器跑道上上升和下降时的手部、脚部和手指的同时摄像和压力分析来测试的。指猴在所有坡度上的运动中都始终弯曲手指。当手指与地面接触时,压力可以忽略不计,明显小于手掌或跖骨的压力。此外,指猴垂直抬起手离开地面,而不是“脚趾离地”,并且以比在其他坡度上更慢的速度头朝下下降。与水平运动相比,指猴在头朝下下降时手上的压力会增加,但增加幅度不及上升时脚上的压力增加幅度大。这种压力分布表明,指猴在头朝下下降时会向后转移体重,以减轻对其纤细手指的负荷。这项研究展示了哺乳动物骨骼应对复杂功能需求的几种新颖的生物力学权衡。

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