Ravosa M J
Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, Illinois 60611-3008, USA.
J Morphol. 1996 Aug;229(2):171-90. doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1097-4687(199608)229:2<171::AID-JMOR3>3.0.CO;2-4.
Previous experimental and comparative studies among a wide variety of primate and nonprimate mammals provide a unique source of information for investigating the functional and phylogenetic significance of variation in the masticatory apparatus of Eocene primates. To provide a quantitative study of mandibular form and function in Eocene primates, the scaling of jaw dimensions and the development of symphyseal fusion was considered in a broad sample of North American and European Adapidae and Omomyidae. Statistical analyses indicate a significant size-related pattern of symphyseal fusion across Eocene primates, with larger taxa often having a greater degree of fusion than smaller species; this trend is also evident at the family level. As adapids are mostly larger than omomyids and these taxa show allometry of symphyseal fusion, this may explain why no omomyids evince complete fusion. Controlling for jaw size, species with greater symphyseal fusion tend to have more robust jaws than those with a lesser amount of fusion. Upon further examination, a primary reason why adapids have more robust mandibles than omomyids is associated with the presence of taxa with fused symphyses, and thus more robust jaws, in the adapid sample, whereas no omomyids have fused symphyses. In addition, there is little indication of a dietary effect, as measured by molar shear-crest development, on symphyseal fusion. Moreover, as there is no correlation between molar shear-crest development and skull size, this also points to the absence of a size-related pattern of dietary preference underlying the allometry of symphyseal fusion. Based on the interspecific and ontogenetic allometry of symphyseal ossification in Eocene primates, jaw-scaling patterns are used to further examine the functional determinants of fusion in this group. This study indicates that greater dorsoventral shear during mastication is a more likely factor than lateral transverse bending ("wishboning") in the evolution of symphyseal fusion among "late-fusing" mammals like adapids and omomyids. Given that wishboning is an important functional determinant of symphyseal form in recent anthropoids, apparently the evolutionary development of marked wishboning occurs only in taxa that shift the timing of fusion to a growth stage preceding the onset of weaning (before adult masticatory patterns are fully developed) and perhaps first ossified the symphysis to counter elevated dorsoventral shear stress. As early anthropoids probably consisted of members varying interspecifically and ontogenetically in the degree of ossification, it is especially informative to analyze the adaptive setting in which anthropoid symphyseal fusion evolved from a similar primitive "prosimian" perspective. Finally, since taxa with fused symphyses are widely distributed across mammals, a similar analytical framework could be directed profitably at unraveling the functional and evolutionary significance of symphyseal fusion in other mammalian clades.
此前在各种灵长类和非灵长类哺乳动物中开展的实验和比较研究,为探究始新世灵长类咀嚼器官变异的功能和系统发育意义提供了独特的信息来源。为了对始新世灵长类的下颌形态和功能进行定量研究,我们在北美和欧洲的阔鼻猴科及眼镜猴科的大量样本中,考量了颌骨尺寸的缩放以及联合部融合的发育情况。统计分析表明,始新世灵长类动物的联合部融合存在显著的与体型相关的模式,体型较大的类群通常比体型较小的物种融合程度更高;这种趋势在科级层面也很明显。由于阔鼻猴大多比眼镜猴体型大,且这些类群显示出联合部融合的异速生长,这或许可以解释为什么没有眼镜猴表现出完全融合。在控制颌骨大小的情况下,联合部融合程度较高的物种往往比融合程度较低的物种拥有更粗壮的颌骨。进一步研究发现,阔鼻猴的下颌比眼镜猴更粗壮的一个主要原因是,阔鼻猴样本中存在联合部融合的类群,因此颌骨更粗壮,而没有眼镜猴有联合部融合。此外,以臼齿剪切嵴发育来衡量,几乎没有迹象表明饮食对联合部融合有影响。而且,由于臼齿剪切嵴发育与头骨大小之间没有相关性,这也表明在联合部融合的异速生长背后不存在与体型相关的饮食偏好模式。基于始新世灵长类动物联合部骨化的种间和个体发育异速生长,颌骨缩放模式被用于进一步研究该类群融合的功能决定因素。这项研究表明,在阔鼻猴和眼镜猴等“晚融合”哺乳动物的联合部融合进化过程中,咀嚼时更大的背腹向剪切力比侧向横向弯曲(“叉骨状”)更可能是一个因素。鉴于叉骨状是现代类人猿联合部形态的一个重要功能决定因素,显然明显的叉骨状的进化发展仅发生在那些将融合时间转移到断奶开始前的生长阶段(在成年咀嚼模式完全形成之前)且可能首先使联合部骨化以应对升高的背腹向剪切应力的类群中。由于早期类人猿可能由种间和个体发育上联合部骨化程度不同的成员组成,从类似的原始“原猴类”角度分析类人猿联合部融合进化的适应环境尤其具有启发性。最后,由于联合部融合的类群广泛分布于哺乳动物中,一个类似的分析框架可以有效地用于揭示其他哺乳动物类群中联合部融合的功能和进化意义。