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The Human Semicircular Canals Orientation Is More Similar to the Bonobos than to the Chimpanzees
Authors:Marwan El Khoury  José Braga  Jean Dumoncel  Javotte Nancy  Remi Esclassan  Frederic Vaysse
Institution:1. University of Toulouse, Molecular Anthropology and Image Synthesis Laboratory (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Toulouse, France.; 2. University of Bordeaux, Faculty of dentistry, Bordeaux, France.; Museo Nazionale Preistorico Etnografico ‘L. Pigorini’, Italy,
Abstract:For some traits, the human genome is more closely related to either the bonobo or the chimpanzee genome than they are to each other. Therefore, it becomes crucial to understand whether and how morphostructural differences between humans, chimpanzees and bonobos reflect the well known phylogeny. Here we comparatively investigated intra and extra labyrinthine semicircular canals orientation using 260 computed tomography scans of extant humans (Homo sapiens), bonobos (Pan paniscus) and chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). Humans and bonobos proved more similarities between themselves than with chimpanzees. This finding did not fit with the well established chimpanzee – bonobo monophyly. One hypothesis was convergent evolution in which bonobos and humans produce independently similar phenotypes possibly in response to similar selective pressures that may be associated with postural adaptations. Another possibility was convergence following a “random walk” (Brownian motion) evolutionary model. A more parsimonious explanation was that the bonobo-human labyrinthine shared morphology more closely retained the ancestral condition with chimpanzees being subsequently derived. Finally, these results might be a consequence of genetic diversity and incomplete lineage sorting. The remarkable symmetry of the Semicircular Canals was the second major finding of this article with possible applications in taphonomy. It has the potential to investigate altered fossils, inferring the probability of post-mortem deformation which can lead to difficulties in understanding taxonomic variation, phylogenetic relationships, and functional morphology.
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