Department of Cell and Neurobiology, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2013 Jul 29;8(7):e71020. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0071020. Print 2013.
Large-scale interspecific studies of mammals ranging between 0.04-280 kg have shown that larger animals walk with more extended limb joints. Within a taxon or clade, however, the relationship between body size and joint posture is less straightforward. Factors that may affect the lack of congruence between broad and narrow phylogenetic analyses of limb kinematics include limited sampling of (1) ranges of body size, and/or (2) numbers of individuals. Unfortunately, both issues are inherent in laboratory-based or zoo locomotion research. In this study, we examined the relationship between body mass and elbow and knee joint angles (our proxies of fore- and hind limb posture, respectively) in a cross-sectional ontogenetic sample of wild chacma baboons (Papio hamadryas ursinus) habituated in the De Hoop Nature Reserve, South Africa. Videos were obtained from 33 individuals of known age (12 to ≥ 108 months) and body mass (2-29.5 kg) during walking trials. Results show that older, heavier baboons walk with significantly more extended knee joints but not elbow joints. This pattern is consistent when examining only males, but not within the female sample. Heavier, older baboons also display significantly less variation in their hind limb posture compared to lighter, young animals. Thus, within this ontogenetic sample of a single primate species spanning an order of magnitude in body mass, hind limb posture exhibited a postural scaling phenomenon while the forelimbs did not. These findings may further help explain 1) why younger mammals (including baboons) tend to have relatively stronger bones than adults, and 2) why humeri appear relatively weaker than femora (in at least baboons). Finally, this study demonstrates how field-acquired kinematics can help answer fundamental biomechanical questions usually addressed only in animal gait laboratories.
已在 0.04-280 公斤范围内的哺乳动物的大规模种间研究表明,较大的动物行走时四肢关节的伸展度更大。然而,在一个分类单元或进化枝内,体型与关节姿势之间的关系并不那么直接。可能影响肢体运动学的广义和狭义系统发育分析之间缺乏一致性的因素包括:(1)体型范围和/或(2)个体数量的采样有限。不幸的是,这两个问题在基于实验室或动物园的运动研究中是固有的。在这项研究中,我们检查了南非德霍普自然保护区习惯化的野生狒狒(Papio hamadryas ursinus)的横断发育样本中体重与肘和膝关节角度(分别为前肢和后肢姿势的代表)之间的关系。在行走试验中,从已知年龄(12 至≥108 个月)和体重(2-29.5 公斤)的 33 只个体获得了视频。结果表明,年龄较大、体重较重的狒狒行走时膝关节伸展得更明显,但肘关节没有。仅检查雄性时,这种模式是一致的,但在雌性样本中则不一致。较重、年龄较大的狒狒的后肢姿势变化也明显小于较轻、年轻的动物。因此,在这个跨越一个数量级体重的单一灵长类物种的发育样本中,后肢姿势表现出一种姿势缩放现象,而前肢则没有。这些发现可能进一步解释了 1)为什么年轻的哺乳动物(包括狒狒)的骨骼相对比成年动物更强壮,以及 2)为什么肱骨相对于股骨(至少在狒狒中)看起来相对较弱。最后,这项研究表明,如何从野外获得的运动学数据可以帮助回答通常仅在动物步态实验室中解决的基本生物力学问题。