Department of Biological Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2013 Jan 22;110(4):1237-42. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1208717110. Epub 2012 Dec 31.
Paleoanthropologists have long argued--often contentiously--about the climbing abilities of early hominins and whether a foot adapted to terrestrial bipedalism constrained regular access to trees. However, some modern humans climb tall trees routinely in pursuit of honey, fruit, and game, often without the aid of tools or support systems. Mortality and morbidity associated with facultative arboreality is expected to favor behaviors and anatomies that facilitate safe and efficient climbing. Here we show that Twa hunter-gatherers use extraordinary ankle dorsiflexion (>45°) during climbing, similar to the degree observed in wild chimpanzees. Although we did not detect a skeletal signature of dorsiflexion in museum specimens of climbing hunter-gatherers from the Ituri forest, we did find that climbing by the Twa is associated with longer fibers in the gastrocnemius muscle relative to those of neighboring, nonclimbing agriculturalists. This result suggests that a more excursive calf muscle facilitates climbing with a bipedally adapted ankle and foot by positioning the climber closer to the tree, and it might be among the mechanisms that allow hunter-gatherers to access the canopy safely. Given that we did not find a skeletal correlate for this observed behavior, our results imply that derived aspects of the hominin ankle associated with bipedalism remain compatible with vertical climbing and arboreal resource acquisition. Our findings challenge the persistent arboreal-terrestrial dichotomy that has informed behavioral reconstructions of fossil hominins and highlight the value of using modern humans as models for inferring the limits of hominin arboreality.
古人类学家长期以来一直在争论早期人类的攀爬能力,以及适应陆地两足行走的脚部是否限制了他们经常进入树木。然而,一些现代人经常在没有工具或支撑系统的情况下爬上高大的树木来获取蜂蜜、水果和猎物。与选择性树栖相关的死亡率和发病率预计会促进有利于安全和高效攀爬的行为和解剖结构。在这里,我们发现图瓦狩猎采集者在攀爬过程中使用了非常大的踝关节背屈(>45°),与野生黑猩猩观察到的程度相似。虽然我们没有在伊图里森林中攀爬狩猎采集者的博物馆标本中检测到背屈的骨骼特征,但我们确实发现,与相邻的非攀爬农民相比,图瓦人的攀爬与比目鱼肌中的纤维更长有关。这一结果表明,更外展的小腿肌肉通过将攀爬者更靠近树木的位置,使双足适应的脚踝和脚部更容易攀爬,这可能是允许狩猎采集者安全进入树冠的机制之一。鉴于我们没有发现这种观察到的行为的骨骼相关性,我们的结果意味着与两足行走相关的人类脚踝的衍生方面仍然与垂直攀爬和树栖资源获取兼容。我们的发现挑战了一直以来指导化石人类行为重建的树栖与地栖二分法,并强调了将现代人类作为推断人类树栖能力极限的模型的价值。