Muscles & Movement, Biomedical Sciences Group, KU Leuven Campus Kulak, Kortrijk, Belgium.
School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Deakin University, Waurn Pounds, Victoria, Australia.
J Anat. 2021 Feb;238(2):321-337. doi: 10.1111/joa.13314. Epub 2020 Oct 4.
Nonhuman primates have a highly diverse locomotor repertoire defined by an equally diverse hand use. Based on how primates use their hands during locomotion, we can distinguish between terrestrial and arboreal taxa. The 'arboreal' hand is likely adapted towards high wrist mobility and grasping, whereas the 'terrestrial' hand will show adaptations to loading. While the morphology of the forearm and hand bones have been studied extensively, functional adaptations in the forearm and hand musculature to locomotor behaviour have been documented only scarcely. In this paper, we investigate the forelimb musculature of the highly arboreal gibbons (including Hylobates lar,Hylobates pileatus,Nomascus leucogenys,Nomascus concolor and Symphalangus syndactylus) and compare this with the musculature of the semi-terrestrial rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta). Anatomical data from previous dissections on knuckle-walking bonobos (Pan paniscus) and bipedal humans (Homo sapiens) are also included to further integrate the analyses in the scope of catarrhine hand adaptation. This study indicates that the overall configuration of the arm and hand musculature of these primates is very similar but there are some apparent differences in relative size which can be linked to differences in forelimb function and which might be related to their specific locomotor behaviour. In macaques, there is a large development of wrist deviators, wrist and digital flexors, and m. triceps brachii, as these muscles are important during the different phases of palmi- and digitigrade quadrupedal walking to stabilize the wrist and elbow. In addition, their m. flexor carpi ulnaris is the most important contributor to the total force-generating capacity of the wrist flexors and deviators, and is needed to counteract the adducting torque at the elbow joint during quadrupedal walking. Gibbons show a relatively high force-generating capacity in their forearm rotators, wrist and digital flexors, which are important muscles in brachiation to actively regulate forward movement of the body. The results also stress the importance of the digital flexors in bonobos, during climbing and clambering, and in humans, which is likely linked to our advanced manipulation skills.
非人类灵长类动物的运动方式非常多样化,其手部使用方式同样多样。根据灵长类动物在运动过程中对手的使用方式,我们可以区分出陆生和树栖类群。“树栖”手可能适应于高手腕灵活性和抓握能力,而“陆生”手则会适应于负重。虽然前臂和手部骨骼的形态已经得到了广泛研究,但前臂和手部肌肉对运动行为的适应功能却很少被记录下来。在本文中,我们研究了高度树栖的长臂猿(包括 Hylobates lar、Hylobates pileatus、Nomascus leucogenys、Nomascus concolor 和 Symphalangus syndactylus)的前肢肌肉,并将其与半陆生的猕猴(Macaca mulatta)的肌肉进行了比较。本文还包括了对跖行的黑猩猩(Pan paniscus)和双足行走的人类(Homo sapiens)的解剖学数据,以便进一步将分析范围扩大到类人猿手部适应的范畴。研究表明,这些灵长类动物的手臂和手部肌肉的整体结构非常相似,但在相对大小上存在一些明显的差异,这些差异与前肢功能的差异有关,可能与它们特定的运动行为有关。在猕猴中,腕侧屈肌、腕和指屈肌以及肱三头肌的发育较大,因为这些肌肉在手掌和指部着地的四肢行走的不同阶段非常重要,能够稳定腕关节和肘关节。此外,猕猴的尺侧腕屈肌是腕部屈肌和侧屈肌总力产生能力的最重要贡献者,在四肢行走时需要对抗肘关节的内收扭矩。长臂猿的前臂旋转肌、腕和指屈肌具有相对较高的力产生能力,这些肌肉在臂行运动中非常重要,能够主动调节身体的向前运动。研究结果还强调了数字屈肌在黑猩猩攀爬和攀爬中的重要性,以及在人类中的重要性,这可能与我们先进的操作技能有关。