Department of Anatomy, NYIT College of Osteopathic Medicine, Northern Boulevard, Old Westbury, New York.
Center for the Advanced Study of Human Paleobiology, The George Washington University, 800 22nd St. NW, Suite 6000, Washington, DC.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2018 May;166(1):84-94. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.23404. Epub 2018 Jan 18.
Gorillas, along with chimpanzees and bonobos, are ubiquitously described as 'knuckle-walkers.' Consequently, knuckle-walking (KW) has been featured pre-eminently in hypotheses of the pre-bipedal locomotor behavior of hominins and in the evolution of locomotor behavior in apes. However, anecdotal and behavioral accounts suggest that mountain gorillas may utilize a more complex repertoire of hand postures, which could alter current interpretations of African ape locomotion and its role in the emergence of human bipedalism. Here we documented hand postures during terrestrial locomotion in wild mountain gorillas to investigate the frequency with which KW and other hand postures are utilized in the wild.
Multiple high-speed cameras were used to record bouts of terrestrial locomotion of 77 habituated mountain gorillas at Bwindi Impenetrable National Park (Uganda) and Volcanoes National Park (Rwanda).
We captured high-speed video of hand contacts in 8% of the world's population of mountain gorillas. Our results reveal that nearly 40% of these gorillas used "non-KW" hand postures, and these hand postures constituted 15% of all hand contacts. Some of these "non-KW" hand postures have never been documented in gorillas, yet match hand postures previously identified in orangutans.
These results highlight a previously unrecognized level of hand postural diversity in gorillas, and perhaps great apes generally. Although present at lower frequencies than KW, we suggest that the possession of multiple, versatile hand postures present in wild mountain gorillas may represent a shared feature of the African ape and human clade (or even great ape clade) rather than KW per se.
大猩猩与黑猩猩和倭黑猩猩一样,通常被描述为“指节行走者”。因此,指节行走(KW)在人类祖先的前双足运动行为假说和类人猿运动行为的演化中一直占据着突出地位。然而,轶事和行为描述表明,山地大猩猩可能使用了更复杂的手部姿势,这可能会改变当前对非洲猿类运动的解释及其在人类双足行走出现中的作用。在这里,我们记录了野生山地大猩猩在陆地运动中的手部姿势,以研究 KW 和其他手部姿势在野外的使用频率。
使用多台高速摄像机记录了在布温迪难以渗透国家公园(乌干达)和火山国家公园(卢旺达)习惯化的 77 只山地大猩猩的陆地运动爆发。
我们拍摄到了世界上 40%的山地大猩猩使用“非 KW”手部姿势的高速视频,这些手部姿势构成了所有手部接触的 15%。其中一些“非 KW”手部姿势以前从未在大猩猩中记录过,但与之前在猩猩中确定的手部姿势相匹配。
这些结果突出了大猩猩以前未被认识到的手部姿势多样性水平,也许是一般的类人猿。尽管频率低于 KW,但我们认为,野生山地大猩猩拥有多种多功能的手部姿势可能代表了非洲猿和人类分支(甚至是类人猿分支)的共同特征,而不仅仅是 KW 本身。