现代人类胸骨和骨盆带的两性异形和祖先变异。

IF 0.7 4区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Homo-Journal of Comparative Human Biology Pub Date : 2023-04-14 DOI:10.1127/homo/2023/1486
Daphne R Hudson, John H Langdon
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引用次数: 1

摘要

讨论躯干形状和胸部区域的两性二态性的进化假设这种二态性独立于身体大小而存在。我们在两个人群中测试了这一假设,并进一步研究了理解胸区两性二态性所需要的东西。与女性相比,现代男性的肩膀较宽,臀部较窄,这使得男性的躯干呈三角形。女性骨盆较宽通常归因于分娩压力,而男性胸围较宽则被认为是一种适应,可以改善狩猎或性内竞争。虽然骨盆带的性别二态性已知在调整了人群的体型后存在,但大多数关于胸带性别二态性的研究并没有调整数据来解释性别大小二态性或比较不同的祖先群体。上述解释锁骨和肩胛骨性别二态性是自然选择的产物的假设是基于一个未经检验的假设,即性别差异不与体型成比例。本研究通过比较已知性别和身高的南非黑人和白人的胸带、骨盆带和六种胸盆腔指数的各种测量值来验证这一假设,以测试性别和祖先群体在调整体型差异后是否会在这些值上有所不同。祖先群体的比较表明,南非白人的胸部和骨盆尺寸比南非黑人大,但黑人的指数值比白人大。无论血统和体型的差异,男性的胸区明显更宽,这可以通过个人胸围测量和胸骨盆指数的比较来证明。这种两性二态性的模式在骨盆区域被逆转,在那里女性有更大的骨骼元素。除了发现胸骨和骨盆骨骼平均值的绝对和相对差异外,女性和男性以及黑人和白人在这些特征的比例关系上也存在差异,这表明这些骨骼的不同异速生长轨迹可能是由它们不同的进化功能、对特定环境的适应或年龄导致的长度变化来解释的。这些结果表明,胸部区域的两性二态性不是尺度的产物,该区域的差异反映了适应力量以独特的方式作用于每种性别,这与早期进化解释的假设一致。
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Sexual dimorphism and ancestral variation in the pectoral and pelvic girdles of modern humans.

Discussions of the evolution of sexual dimorphism in torso shape and the pectoral region assume that this dimorphism exists independently of body size. We test this assumption in two human populations and further examine what is needed to understand sexual dimorphism in the pectoral region. Modern human males have broad shoulders and narrow hips relative to females, lending males a more triangular torso. The wider female pelvis is commonly attributed to obstetric pressures while the broader male pectoral girdle has been argued to be an adaptation that improves hunting or intrasexual competition. While sexual dimorphism in the pelvic girdle is known to exist after adjusting for body size across human populations, most studies of sexual dimorphism in the pectoral girdle have not adjusted the data to account for sexual size dimorphism or compared different ancestral groups. The aforementioned hypotheses explaining sexual dimorphism in the clavicle and scapula as products of natural selection are predicated on the untested assumption that sex differences do not scale with body size. This study tests this assumption by comparing various measurements of the pectoral girdle, the pelvic girdle, and six pectoral-pelvic indices of black and white South Africans of known sex and height to test whether the sexes and ancestral groups will differ in these values after adjusting for differences in body size. Comparisons of ancestral groups reveal that white South Africans have larger pectoral and pelvic dimensions than black South Africans, but that blacks have larger index values than whites. Regardless of differences in ancestry and body size, males have significantly broader pectoral regions as indicated by comparisons of both individual pectoral measurements and pectoral-pelvic indices. This pattern of sexual dimorphism is reversed in the pelvic region where females have larger skeletal elements. In addition to finding both absolute and relative differences in mean values for the pectoral and pelvic skeleton, females and males and blacks and whites differ in the scaling relationship of these traits, suggesting different allometric trajectories for these bones that may be explained by their distinct evolutionary functions, their adaptations to specific environments, or by changes in lengths due to age. These results suggest that sexual dimorphism in the pectoral region is not a product of scaling and that differences in this region reflect adaptive forces acting in unique ways on each sex, consistent with the assumptions of earlier evolutionary explanations.

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