Mechanical and morphometric approaches to body mass estimation in rhesus macaques: A test of skeletal variables

Author:

Turcotte Cassandra M.123ORCID,Choi Audrey M.12,Spear Jeffrey K.12ORCID,Hernandez‐Janer Eva M124,Dickinson Edwin3ORCID,Taboada Hannah G.12,Stock Michala K.5ORCID,Villamil Catalina I.6ORCID,Bauman Samuel E.7, ,Martinez Melween I.7,Brent Lauren J. N.8,Snyder‐Mackler Noah91011,Montague Michael J.12ORCID,Platt Michael L.12,Williams Scott A.12ORCID,Antón Susan C.12,Higham James P.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for the Study of Human Origins, Department of Anthropology New York University New York New York USA

2. New York Consortium in Evolutionary Primatology New York New York USA

3. Department of Anatomy New York Institute of Technology College of Osteopathic Medicine Old Westbury New York USA

4. Department of Evolutionary Anthropology Rutgers University New Brunswick New Jersey USA

5. Department of Sociology and Anthropology Metropolitan State University of Denver Denver Colorado USA

6. School of Chiropractic Universidad Central del Caribe Bayamón Puerto Rico USA

7. Caribbean Primate Research Center University of Puerto Rico San Juan Puerto Rico USA

8. Department of Psychology University of Exeter Exeter UK

9. School of Life Sciences Arizona State University Tempe Arizona USA

10. School for Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University Tempe Arizona USA

11. Center for Evolution and Medicine, Arizona State University Tempe Arizona USA

12. Department of Neuroscience University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesEstimation of body mass from skeletal metrics can reveal important insights into the paleobiology of archeological or fossil remains. The standard approach constructs predictive equations from postcrania, but studies have questioned the reliability of traditional measures. Here, we examine several skeletal features to assess their accuracy in predicting body mass.Materials and MethodsAntemortem mass measurements were compared with common skeletal dimensions from the same animals postmortem, using 115 rhesus macaques (male: n = 43; female: n = 72). Individuals were divided into training (n = 58) and test samples (n = 57) to build and assess Ordinary Least Squares or multivariate regressions by residual sum of squares (RSS) and AIC weights. A leave‐one‐out approach was implemented to formulate the best fit multivariate models, which were compared against a univariate and a previously published catarrhine body‐mass estimation model.ResultsFemur circumference represented the best univariate model. The best model overall was composed of four variables (femur, tibia and fibula circumference and humerus length). By RSS and AICw, models built from rhesus macaque data (RSS = 26.91, AIC = −20.66) better predicted body mass than did the catarrhine model (RSS = 65.47, AIC = 20.24).ConclusionBody mass in rhesus macaques is best predicted by a 4‐variable equation composed of humerus length and hind limb midshaft circumferences. Comparison of models built from the macaque versus the catarrhine data highlight the importance of taxonomic specificity in predicting body mass. This paper provides a valuable dataset of combined somatic and skeletal data in a primate, which can be used to build body mass equations for fragmentary fossil evidence.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

Leakey Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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