Abstract
AbstractScapular morphology is highly variable across the human population and appears to be sexually dimorphic – differing significantly between males and females. However, previous investigations of sexual dimorphism in scapula shape have not considered the effects of allometry (the relationship between size and shape). Disentangling allometry from sexual dimorphism is necessary because apparent sex-based differences in morphology could be due to inherent differences in body size. This study aimed to investigate sexual dimorphism in scapula shape and examine the role of allometry in sex-based variation. We used three-dimensional geometric morphometrics with Procrustes ANOVA to quantify scapula shape variation associated with sex and size in 125 scapulae. Scapular morphology significantly differed between males and females, and males tended to have larger scapulae than females for the same body height. We found that males and females exhibited distinct allometric relationships, and sexually dimorphic shape changes did not align with male- or female-specific allometry. A secondary test revealed that sexual dimorphism in scapula shape persisted between males and females of similar body heights. Overall, our findings indicate that sex-based differences in scapular shape are independent of size-shape relationships. Our results shed light on the potential role of sexual selection in human shoulder evolution, present new hypotheses for biomechanical differences in shoulder function between sexes, and identify relevant traits for improving sex classification accuracy in forensic analyses.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference60 articles.
1. Geomorph: Software for geometric morphometric analyses;R package version,2023
2. Evolvability and Constraint in the Primate Basicranium, Shoulder, and Hip and the Importance of Multi-trait Evolution
3. Economics and Identity*
4. Occupational Repetitive Strain Injuries and Gender in Ontario, 1986 to 1991
5. Atamtürk, D. , Pelin, C. , Duyar, İ. , 2019. Estimation of sex from scapular measurements: use of the bone area as a criterion.