量化圣地亚哥卡约猕猴骨骼和软组织测量之间的关系。

IF 1.7 2区 生物学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY American Journal of Biological Anthropology Pub Date : 2024-03-06 DOI:10.1002/ajpa.24920
Cassandra M. Turcotte, Audrey M. Choi, Jeffrey K. Spear, Eva M. Hernandez-Janer, Hannah G. Taboada, Michala K. Stock, Catalina I. Villamil, Samuel E. Bauman, Cayo Biobank Research Unit, Melween I. Martinez, Lauren J. N. Brent, Noah Snyder-Mackler, Michael J. Montague, Michael L. Platt, Scott A. Williams, James P. Higham, Susan C. Antón
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摘要

目的:对灵长类动物和人类化石记录的解读通常依赖于从骨骼测量结果来估算躯体尺寸。躯体和骨骼的变化都被用来评估灵长类动物如何应对环境变化。然而,目前还不清楚骨骼变异与软组织的匹配和预测程度。在此,我们使用波多黎各圣地亚哥卡约的猕猴死前和死后的配对测量数据,通过比较体型和骨骼测量数据,对组织之间的关系进行了经验性测试:将 105 只猕猴的躯体测量值与骨骼测量值进行配对,以研究以下测量值的配对变异信号(即变异系数、性二形)和二元依赖性(主轴回归):(1) 肢长;(2) 体重;(3) 骨骼:(1) 肢长;(2) 关节宽;(3) 肢围。通过普通最小二乘法回归建立了从骨骼估计软组织尺寸的预测模型:结果:躯体测量和骨骼测量显示出统计学上等效的变异系数和性别二形性,以及在肢体长度(R2>0.78,0.82)、关节宽度(R2>0.74,0.83)和肢体周长(R2>0.53,0.68)(其次)方面的骺线-存在普通最小二乘法(OLS)高度相关性:结论:根据群体变异信号,骨骼测量结果可以很好地替代躯体测量值。OLS回归表明,骨骼相关指标对躯体尺寸有很高的预测性。本文所建立的规程和回归方程为从白垩纪化石中重建可靠的躯体尺寸提供了基础,并验证了我们比较或合并基于硬组织或软组织代用种群数据的研究结果的能力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Quantifying the relationship between bone and soft tissue measures within the rhesus macaques of Cayo Santiago

Objectives

Interpretations of the primate and human fossil record often rely on the estimation of somatic dimensions from bony measures. Both somatic and skeletal variation have been used to assess how primates respond to environmental change. However, it is unclear how well skeletal variation matches and predicts soft tissue. Here, we empirically test the relationship between tissues by comparing somatic and skeletal measures using paired measures of pre- and post-mortem rhesus macaques from Cayo Santiago, Puerto Rico.

Materials and Methods

Somatic measurements were matched with skeletal dimensions from 105 rhesus macaque individuals to investigate paired signals of variation (i.e., coefficients of variation, sexual dimorphism) and bivariate codependence (reduced major axis regression) in measures of: (1) limb length; (2) joint breadth; and (3) limb circumference. Predictive models for the estimation of soft tissue dimensions from skeletons were built from Ordinary Least Squares regressions.

Results

Somatic and skeletal measurements showed statistically equivalent coefficients of variation and sexual dimorphism as well as high epiphyses-present ordinary least square (OLS) correlations in limb lengths (R2 >0.78, 0.82), joint breadths (R2 >0.74, 0.83) and, to a lesser extent, limb circumference (R2 >0.53, 0.68).

Conclusion

Skeletal measurements are good substitutions for somatic values based on population signals of variation. OLS regressions indicate that skeletal correlates are highly predictive of somatic dimensions. The protocols and regression equations established here provide a basis for reliable reconstruction of somatic dimension from catarrhine fossils and validate our ability to compare or combine results of studies based on population data of either hard or soft tissue proxies.

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