2002年10月1日
類人猿のぶらさがり型適応は多元的か?
霊長類研究 = Primate research
- 巻
- 18
- 号
- 2
- 開始ページ
- 175
- 終了ページ
- 185
- 記述言語
- 日本語
- 掲載種別
- 出版者・発行元
- Primate Society of Japan
All living apes share Suspensory adaptations. Spool-shaped Numeral trochleae in apes have been considered as a specialization related to suspensory positional behaviors. While the humerus of <i>Sivapithecus</i> has a spool-shaped trochlea, its shaft is curved like non-hominoid anthropoids (e.g., cercopithecids). So-called <i>Sivapithecus</i> dilemma involves three kinds of question. Is a <i>Sivapithecus-Pongo</i> clade valid? Did <i>Sivapithecus</i> employ substantial suspensory positional behavior? Is the spool-shaped trochlea really originated from suspensory positional behavior? The author hypothesizes that <i>Sivapithecus</i> and <i>Pongo</i> form a clade and that <i>Sivapithecus</i> did not employ suspensory positional behavior (thus, the spool-shaped trochleae are not originated from suspensory behaviors and suspensory adaptations in living apes are results of parallel evolution). In living anthropoids, suspensory behavior (plus climbing) and pronograde quadrupedalism are the dichotomy of arboreal behavioral adaptation. Apes and some atelines engage in the former. However, it is probable that some Miocene apes including <i>Sivapithecus</i> can not be incorporated to this dichotomy and that orthograde climbing represented their basic positional adaptation.
- リンク情報
-
- CiNii Articles
- http://ci.nii.ac.jp/naid/10010613998
- CiNii Books
- http://ci.nii.ac.jp/ncid/AN10080557
- ID情報
-
- ISSN : 0912-4047
- CiNii Articles ID : 10010613998
- CiNii Books ID : AN10080557
- identifiers.cinii_nr_id : 1000000227828