Ecological and phylogenetic influences on limb joint kinematics in wild primates

Author:

Janisch Judith1ORCID,McNamara Allison2,Myers Lydia C2,Schapker Nicole13ORCID,Dunham Noah T45,Phelps Taylor1,Mundry Roger678,Hieronymus Tobin1,Shapiro Liza J2,Young Jesse W1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Northeast Ohio Medical University , Rootstown , USA

2. Department of Anthropology, University of Texas at Austin , Austin , USA

3. School of Biomedical Sciences, Kent State University , Kent , USA

4. Cleveland Metroparks Zoo, Conservation and Science Department , Cleveland , USA

5. Department of Biology, Case Western Reserve University , Cleveland , USA

6. Cognitive Ethology Laboratory, German Primate Center, Leibniz Institute for Primate Research , Göttingen , Germany

7. Department for Primate Cognition, Georg-August-University Göttingen , Göttingen , Germany

8. Leibniz Science Campus Primate Cognition , Göttingen , Germany

Abstract

Abstract Arboreal locomotion is precarious and places multiple challenges upon stability. Studies have shown that captive primates respond to narrower and steeper supports by flexing limb joints and adopting a compliant gait. We tested whether these same kinematic responses are adopted by wild primates freely ranging over a variety of supports in their natural habitats. We recorded five species of platyrrhines, five species of catarrhines, and four species of strepsirrhines with modified GoPro cameras and used remote measurement to quantify substrate characteristics. Video images were imported into ImageJ to measure the angular kinematics of limb joints during quadrupedal locomotion on a variety of arboreal supports. We statistically tested for associations between joint posture and substrate characteristics, and then disentangled the influence of phylogeny and substrate on limb joint kinematics using variation partitioning and redundancy analysis. Our results partially confirm previous kinematic studies and suggest variation in support orientation, more than diameter or compliance, influences quadrupedal gait kinematics. Phylogenetic relatedness explained more variation in the data than substrate properties. This suggests primates either prospectively choose relatively ‘safe’ substrates for locomotion, or that they possess locomotor adaptations independent of limb joint kinematics per se to overcome the challenges of the precarious arboreal environment.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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