Godfrey L R, Sutherland M R, Paine R R, Williams F L, Boy D S, Vuillaume-Randriamanantena M
Department of Anthropology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst 01003, USA.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 1995 May;97(1):11-36. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.1330970103.
Surface areas of humeral and femoral heads scale largely as a function of body size. However, differences in the relative sizes of these articular surfaces are correlated with differential joint mobility and force transmission through fore- and hindlimbs. They can therefore assist interpretation of the positional behavior of extinct species. In this paper, we document variation in ratios of humeral head surface area to femoral head surface area among extant primates and other mammals. We then examine a group of extinct primates: the subfossil lemurs of Madagascar. Many Malagasy lemurs, including some giant extinct species with very long forelimbs and short hindlimbs, have relatively small humeral heads and large femoral heads. We explore the adaptive implications of this pattern.
肱骨和股骨头的表面积在很大程度上随体型大小而变化。然而,这些关节面相对大小的差异与前肢和后肢不同的关节活动度以及力的传递相关。因此,它们有助于解读已灭绝物种的姿势行为。在本文中,我们记录了现存灵长类动物和其他哺乳动物中肱骨头表面积与股骨头表面积之比的变化。然后,我们研究了一组已灭绝的灵长类动物:马达加斯加的亚化石狐猴。许多马达加斯加狐猴,包括一些已灭绝的巨型物种,它们前肢非常长而后肢很短,其肱骨头相对较小而股骨头较大。我们探讨了这种模式的适应性意义。