Department of Biology, Bronx Community College, City University of New York, Bronx, New York 10453, USA.
Anat Rec (Hoboken). 2010 Aug;293(8):1337-49. doi: 10.1002/ar.21171.
The location of the mental foramen on the mandibular corpus has figured prominently in debates concerning the taxonomy of fossil hominins and Gorilla gorilla. In this study we quantify the antero/posterior (A/P) position of the mental foramen across great apes, modern humans and Australopithecus. Contrary to most qualitative assessments, we find significant differences between some extant hominoid species in mental foramen A/P position supporting its potential usefulness as a character for taxonomic and phylogenetic analyses of fossil hominoids. Gorilla gorilla, particularly the eastern subspecies, with a comparatively longer dental arcade and fossil and extant hominins with reduced canines and incisors tend to exhibit more anteriorly positioned mental foramina. Conversely, Pan troglodytes exhibits more posteriorly positioned mental foramina. Variation in this character among Gorilla gorilla subspecies supports recent taxonomic assessments that separate eastern and western populations. In all taxa other than Pan troglodytes the A/P position of the mental foramen is positively allometric with respect to dental arcade length. Thus, within each of these species, specimens with longer dental arcades tend to have more posteriorly positioned mental foramina. Those species with greater sexual dimorphism in canine size and dental arcade length (i.e., Gorilla gorilla and Pongo pygmaeus) exhibit more extreme differences between smaller and larger individuals. Moreover, among great apes those individuals with greater anterior convergence of the dental arcade tend to exhibit more posteriorly positioned mental foramina. Dental arcade length, canine crown area and anterior convergence are all significantly associated with mental foramen A/P position, suggesting that these traits may influence taxonomic variation in the A/P position of the mental foramen.
下颌体颏孔的位置在有关化石人科分类和大猩猩(Gorilla gorilla)的争论中占据了重要地位。在这项研究中,我们量化了大猿类、现代人类和南方古猿的颏孔前后(A/P)位置。与大多数定性评估相反,我们发现一些现生物种的颏孔 A/P 位置存在显著差异,支持其作为化石人科分类和系统发育分析的潜在有用特征。大猩猩(Gorilla gorilla),特别是东部亚种,具有相对较长的齿弓,以及具有减少的犬齿和门齿的化石和现生物种,往往表现出更靠前的颏孔位置。相反,黑猩猩(Pan troglodytes)则表现出更靠后的颏孔位置。大猩猩(Gorilla gorilla)亚种之间的这种特征变化支持了最近将东部和西部种群分开的分类评估。在除黑猩猩(Pan troglodytes)以外的所有分类群中,颏孔的 A/P 位置与齿弓长度呈正异速关系。因此,在这些物种中的每一个物种中,具有较长齿弓的标本往往具有更靠后的颏孔位置。那些在犬齿大小和齿弓长度上具有更大性二型性的物种(即大猩猩(Gorilla gorilla)和猩猩(Pongo pygmaeus))在较小和较大个体之间表现出更极端的差异。此外,在大猿类中,那些齿弓具有更大前向收敛的个体往往具有更靠后的颏孔位置。齿弓长度、犬齿冠面积和前向收敛都与颏孔 A/P 位置显著相关,表明这些特征可能影响颏孔 A/P 位置的分类变化。