Terhune Claire E, Robinson Chris A, Ritzman Terrence B
Department of Anthropology, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas.
J Morphol. 2014 Jun;275(6):661-77. doi: 10.1002/jmor.20246. Epub 2014 Feb 1.
Considerable variation exists in mandibular ramus form among primates, particularly great apes and humans. Recent analyses of adult ramal morphology have suggested that features on the ramus, especially the coronoid process and sigmoid notch, can be treated as phylogenetic characters that can be used to reconstruct relationships among great ape and fossil hominin taxa. Others have contended that ramal morphology is more influenced by function than phylogeny. In addition, it remains unclear how ontogeny of the ramus contributes to adult variation in great apes and humans. Specifically, it is unclear whether differences among adults appear early and are maintained throughout ontogeny, or if these differences appear, or are enhanced, during later development. To address these questions, the present study examined a broad ontogenetic sample of great apes and humans using two-dimensional geometric morphometric analysis. Variation within and among species was summarized using principal component and thin plate spline analyses, and Procrustes distances and discriminant function analyses were used to statistically compare species and age classes. Results suggest that morphological differences among species in ramal morphology appear early in ontogeny and persist into adulthood. Morphological differences among adults are particularly pronounced in the height and angulation of the coronoid process, the depth and anteroposterior length of the sigmoid notch, and the inclination of the ramus. In all taxa, the ascending ramus of the youngest specimens is more posteriorly inclined in relation to the occlusal plane, shifting to become more upright in adults. These results suggest that, although there are likely functional influences over the form of the coronoid process and ramus, the morphology of this region can be profitably used to differentiate among great apes, modern humans, and fossil hominid taxa.
灵长类动物的下颌支形态存在相当大的差异,尤其是在大猩猩和人类中。最近对成年下颌支形态的分析表明,下颌支上的特征,特别是冠突和乙状切迹,可以被视为系统发育特征,可用于重建大猩猩和化石人亚科分类单元之间的关系。其他人则认为,下颌支形态受功能的影响大于系统发育。此外,下颌支的个体发育如何导致大猩猩和人类成年后的差异仍不清楚。具体而言,尚不清楚成年人之间的差异是否在早期就出现并在整个个体发育过程中保持,或者这些差异是否在后期发育中出现或增强。为了解决这些问题,本研究使用二维几何形态测量分析检查了大猩猩和人类的广泛个体发育样本。使用主成分分析和薄板样条分析总结了物种内部和物种之间的变异,并使用普氏距离和判别函数分析对物种和年龄组进行统计比较。结果表明,下颌支形态的物种间形态差异在个体发育早期出现并持续到成年。成年人之间的形态差异在冠突的高度和角度、乙状切迹的深度和前后长度以及下颌支的倾斜度方面尤为明显。在所有分类单元中,最年轻标本的升支相对于咬合平面更向后倾斜,在成年人中则转变为更直立。这些结果表明,尽管冠突和下颌支的形态可能受到功能影响,但该区域可以有效地用于区分大猩猩、现代人类和化石人科分类单元。