Fuente: Penn State Live - research
  Expuesto el: miércoles, 13 de junio de 2012 11:29
  Autor: Penn State Live - research
  Asunto: Inner ear may hold key to ancient primate behavior
| Inner ear may hold key    to ancient primate behaviorWednesday,    June 13, 2012  Three-dimensional    reconstruction of the cranium and semicircular canals from the fossil    anthropoid primate Aegyptopithecus zeuxis. Specimen courtesy of the Egyptian    Geological Museum and Division of Fossil Primates, Duke Lemur Center. UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. --    CT scans of fossilized primate skulls or skull fragments from both the Old    and New Worlds may shed light on how these extinct animals moved, especially    for those species without any known remains, according to an international    team of researchers. The researchers looked at    the bony labyrinth in fossil remains and compared them to CT scans previously    obtained from living primate species. The bony labyrinth of the inner ear is    made up of the cochlea -- the major organ of hearing -- the vestibule and the    three semicircular canals which sense head motion and provide input to    synchronize movement with visual stimuli. "Almost in every    case where there is a fossilized skull, the semicircular canals are present    and well preserved," said Timothy Ryan, assistant professor of    anthropology, geosciences and information sciences and technology, Penn    State. "They are embedded in a very dense part of the skull and so are    protected." Normally, researchers    assess the locomotor behaviors of extinct animals, including primates, by    examining limb bones. However, frequently the only fossilized remains found    are from the head. By comparing the semicircular canals of extinct species to    those of existing species, the researchers could determine if the extinct animals    moved with agility -- leaping like monkeys or lemurs or swinging from limb to    limb like gibbons -- or travelled more slowly like baboons or gorillas. They could make this    determination because the size of the three semicircular canals is closely    related to their sensitivity. Previous research showed    that there is a direct relationship between the size of the semicircular    canals and the degree of agility an animal exhibits. There is also a direct    connection between the size of these canals and the size of the animal. Correcting for animal    size, the researchers compared scans from 16 fossil species spanning New    World monkeys, Old World monkeys and apes, to living primates whose locomotor    behaviors are known. Included in the study are some of the oldest fossil    anthropoids -- the group that includes monkeys, apes and humans -- from the    Fayum Depression in Egypt. "The fossil    anthropoids analyzed here clearly fall into the range of variation of modern    primates, making agility reconstructions based on extant taxa relatively    robust," the researchers reported in today's (June 13) issue of    Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. The researchers believe    that the relatively high degree of correspondence with known behaviors    suggests that this method produces accurate reconstructions of locomotor    agility. The researchers found    that the earliest anthropoids moved in the medium to medium slow range,    slower than predicted. They found that other early anthropoids that predated    the split between monkeys and apes also fell in the medium slow category,    including the well-known species Aegyptophithecus from about 29 million years    ago and other animals from Egypt and Saudi Arabia. But once the split    between Old World monkeys and apes occurs, both monkeys and apes fall in the    medium to medium fast range like macaques. This includes Proconsul heseloni    found in Kenya and considered one of the first apes. The scans from New World    monkeys, dating from 12 to 20 million years ago, showed the animals were    relatively agile similar to cebus monkeys or tamarins. "Most of the fossil    New World monkeys we examined are known only from cranial material with no    associated post-cranial fossils," said Ryan, who is also co-director of    the Center for Quantitative Imaging. "We had no idea about their    locomotion." The researchers now have    predictions of what these New World monkeys were doing and they know that    they were faster than their Old World ancestors. "The research    suggests that the last common ancestor of Old World monkeys and apes would    have been an animal of medium agility, much like living macaques," said    Ryan. "But what is really surprising is that the early ape, Proconsul,    appears more agile than expected. " This result suggests that    the living large-bodied apes, such as gorillas and orangutans, may have    evolved their slower locomotor patterns from these more agile ape ancestors. Other researchers on this    project were Mary T. Silcox, assistant professor of anthropology, University    of Toronto; Alan Walker, Evan Pugh Professor Emeritus of Anthropology and    Biology, Penn State; Xianyun Mao, recent graduate student in statistics, Penn    State; David R Begun, professor of anthropology, University of Toronto;    Brenda R. Benefit, professor of biological anthropology and Monte L. McCrossin,    associate professor and director, museum, New Mexico State University; Philip    D. Gingerich, curator, William J. Sanders, and Iyad S. Zalmout, graduate    student, Museum of Paleontology, University of Michigan; Meike Kohler and    Salvador Moya-Sola,, Catalan Institute of Paleontology, Autonomous University    of Barcelona; Erik R. Seiffert, associate professor of anatomical sciences,    Stony Brook University; Elwyn Simons, James B. Duke Professor Emeritus and    scientific director, Duke University Primate Center and Fred Spoor, Max    Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. The National Science    Foundation and the National Science and Engineering Council of Canada    supported this work. 
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