Crompton Robin Huw
Department of Musculoskeletal Biology, Institute of Ageing and Chronic Disease, The University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
Institute of Human Origins, The University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
J Anat. 2016 Apr;228(4):686-99. doi: 10.1111/joa.12424. Epub 2016 Jan 4.
In the early 20th century the dominant paradigm for the ecological context of the origins of human bipedalism was arboreal suspension. In the 1960s, however, with recognition of the close genetic relationship of humans, chimpanzees and bonobos, and with the first field studies of mountain gorillas and common chimpanzees, it was assumed that locomotion similar to that of common chimpanzees and mountain gorillas, which appeared to be dominated by terrestrial knuckle-walking, must have given rise to human bipedality. This paradigm has been popular, if not universally dominant, until very recently. However, evidence that neither the knuckle-walking or vertical climbing of these apes is mechanically similar to human bipedalism, as well as the hand-assisted bipedality and orthograde clambering of orang-utans, has cast doubt on this paradigm. It now appears that the dominance of terrestrial knuckle-walking in mountain gorillas is an artefact seen only in the extremes of their range, and that both mountain and lowland gorillas have a generalized orthogrady similar to that seen in orang-utans. These data, together with evidence for continued arboreal competence in humans, mesh well with an increasing weight of fossil evidence suggesting that a mix of orang-utan and gorilla-like arboreal locomotion and upright terrestrial bipedalism characterized most australopiths. The late split date of the panins, corresponding to dates for separation of Homo and Australopithecus, leads to the speculation that competition with chimpanzees, as appears to exist today with gorillas, may have driven ecological changes in hominins and perhaps cladogenesis. However, selection for ecological plasticity and morphological conservatism is a core characteristic of Hominidae as a whole, including Hominini.
在20世纪初,人类两足行走起源的生态背景的主导范式是树栖悬吊。然而,在20世纪60年代,随着对人类、黑猩猩和倭黑猩猩之间密切遗传关系的认识,以及对山地大猩猩和普通黑猩猩的首次实地研究,人们认为类似于普通黑猩猩和山地大猩猩的运动方式(似乎以地面指关节行走为主)一定导致了人类两足行走的出现。这种范式一直很流行,即使不是普遍占主导地位,直到最近。然而,有证据表明,这些猿类的指关节行走或垂直攀爬在机械原理上都与人类两足行走不同,以及红毛猩猩的手辅助两足行走和直立攀爬,都对这一范式提出了质疑。现在看来,山地大猩猩中地面指关节行走的主导地位只是在其分布范围的极端情况下才出现的一种假象,而且山地大猩猩和低地大猩猩都具有类似于红毛猩猩的普遍直立姿势。这些数据,再加上人类仍具备树栖能力的证据,与越来越多的化石证据相契合,这些化石证据表明,大多数南方古猿具有红毛猩猩和大猩猩式的树栖运动与直立地面两足行走相结合的特征。泛猿类的晚期分化日期与人类和南方古猿的分离日期相对应,这引发了一种推测,即与黑猩猩的竞争(就像如今与大猩猩的竞争那样)可能推动了人科动物的生态变化,或许还导致了物种形成。然而,对生态可塑性和形态保守性的选择是整个人科动物(包括人族)的核心特征。