Cuff Andrew R, Sparkes Emily L, Randau Marcela, Pierce Stephanie E, Kitchener Andrew C, Goswami Anjali, Hutchinson John R
Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, London, UK.
Structure and Motion Lab, Department of Comparative Biomedical Sciences, The Royal Veterinary College, Hatfield, Herts, UK.
J Anat. 2016 Jul;229(1):128-41. doi: 10.1111/joa.12477. Epub 2016 Apr 14.
The body masses of cats (Mammalia, Carnivora, Felidae) span a ~300-fold range from the smallest to largest species. Despite this range, felid musculoskeletal anatomy remains remarkably conservative, including the maintenance of a crouched limb posture at unusually large sizes. The forelimbs in felids are important for body support and other aspects of locomotion, as well as climbing and prey capture, with the assistance of the vertebral (and hindlimb) muscles. Here, we examine the scaling of the anterior postcranial musculature across felids to assess scaling patterns between different species spanning the range of felid body sizes. The muscle architecture (lengths and masses of the muscle-tendon unit components) for the forelimb, cervical and thoracic muscles was quantified to analyse how the muscles scale with body mass. Our results demonstrate that physiological cross-sectional areas of the forelimb muscles scale positively with increasing body mass (i.e. becoming relatively larger). Many significantly allometric variables pertain to shoulder support, whereas the rest of the limb muscles become relatively weaker in larger felid species. However, when phylogenetic relationships were corrected for, most of these significant relationships disappeared, leaving no significantly allometric muscle metrics. The majority of cervical and thoracic muscle metrics are not significantly allometric, despite there being many allometric skeletal elements in these regions. When forelimb muscle data were considered in isolation or in combination with those of the vertebral muscles in principal components analyses and MANOVAs, there was no significant discrimination among species by either size or locomotory mode. Our results support the inference that larger felid species have relatively weaker anterior postcranial musculature compared with smaller species, due to an absence of significant positive allometry of forelimb or vertebral muscle architecture. This difference in strength is consistent with behavioural changes in larger felids, such as a reduction of maximal speed and other aspects of locomotor abilities.
猫科动物(哺乳纲,食肉目,猫科)的体重范围从最小到最大的物种跨度约为300倍。尽管存在这种范围差异,但猫科动物的肌肉骨骼解剖结构仍然非常保守,包括在异常大的体型下仍保持蹲伏的肢体姿势。猫科动物的前肢对于身体支撑、运动的其他方面以及攀爬和捕获猎物都很重要,在脊柱(和后肢)肌肉的辅助下发挥作用。在这里,我们研究了猫科动物整个后颅前肌肉组织的缩放情况,以评估跨越猫科动物体型范围的不同物种之间的缩放模式。对前肢、颈部和胸部肌肉的肌肉结构(肌腱单位组成部分的长度和质量)进行了量化,以分析肌肉如何随体重缩放。我们的结果表明,前肢肌肉的生理横截面积随体重增加呈正相关缩放(即变得相对更大)。许多显著的异速生长变量与肩部支撑有关,而在体型较大的猫科动物物种中,肢体其他部位的肌肉相对变弱。然而,在对系统发育关系进行校正后,这些显著关系中的大多数都消失了,没有留下显著的异速生长肌肉指标。尽管这些区域有许多异速生长的骨骼元素,但大多数颈部和胸部肌肉指标并没有显著的异速生长。在主成分分析和多变量方差分析中,单独考虑前肢肌肉数据或与脊柱肌肉数据结合考虑时,按体型或运动模式都没有对物种进行显著区分。我们的结果支持这样的推断,即与较小的物种相比,体型较大的猫科动物物种的后颅前肌肉组织相对较弱,这是由于前肢或脊柱肌肉结构缺乏显著的正异速生长。这种力量上的差异与体型较大的猫科动物的行为变化一致,例如最大速度的降低和运动能力的其他方面。