Christiansen P
Department for Historical Geology and Paleontology, Geological Institute, Copenhagen K., Denmark.
J Morphol. 1999 Feb;239(2):167-90. doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1097-4687(199902)239:2<167::AID-JMOR5>3.0.CO;2-8.
Long-bone scaling has been analyzed in a large number of terrestrial mammals for which body masses were known. Earlier proposals that geometric or elastic similarity are suitable as explanations for long-bone scaling across a large size range are not supported. Differential scaling is present, and large mammals on average scale with lower regression slopes than small mammals. Large mammals tend to reduce bending stress during locomotion by having shorter limb bones than predicted rather than by having very thick diaphyses, as is usually assumed. The choice of regression model used to describe data samples in analyses of scaling becomes increasingly important as correlation coefficients decrease, and theoretical models supported by one analysis may not be supported when applying another statistical model to the same data. Differences in limb posture and locomotor performance have profound influence on the amount of stress set up in the appendicular bones during rigorous physical activity and make it unlikely that scaling of long bones across a large size range of terrestrial mammals can be satisfactorily explained by any one power function.
人们已对大量已知体重的陆生哺乳动物的长骨缩放情况进行了分析。早期认为几何相似性或弹性相似性适合解释大尺寸范围内长骨缩放的观点并不成立。存在差异缩放现象,大型哺乳动物平均而言其回归斜率低于小型哺乳动物。大型哺乳动物在运动过程中往往通过拥有比预期更短的肢骨来降低弯曲应力,而非像通常所认为的那样通过拥有非常粗壮的骨干。在缩放分析中,用于描述数据样本的回归模型的选择随着相关系数的降低变得越来越重要,并且当对同一数据应用另一种统计模型时,一种分析所支持的理论模型可能并不被支持。肢体姿势和运动表现的差异对剧烈体力活动期间附肢骨骼中产生的应力大小有深远影响,这使得用任何一个幂函数都不太可能令人满意地解释大尺寸范围内陆生哺乳动物长骨的缩放情况。