Scaling of long bones in ruminants with respect to the scapula |
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Authors: | K E Lilje C Tardieu M S Fischer |
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Institution: | Institut für Spezielle Zoologie und Evolutionsbiologie, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena, Erbertstr.1, Jena, Germany;;C.N.R.S. U.M.R. 8570, Laboratoire d'Anatomie Comparée, Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France |
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Abstract: | The significance of the scapula for locomotion is becoming more and more established. Studies of locomotion in small and medium‐sized mammals show a considerable amplitude of the scapula and a large contribution to step length. Taking this into account, long bone studies of forelimb movement restricted to the ‘arm’ miss one important segment. A regression model (reduced major axis) was used for analysis of a sample of 77 species of ruminants. This sample was divided according to (1) phylogenetic relationships and (2) habitat. The proximal elements of the limbs, scapula and humerus in the anterior extremity, femur in the hindlimb, show a similar scaling in the different analyses. The changes to limb proportions in the different subsamples are caused by the variability of the distal segments. The anterior extremity scales with a higher coefficient than the hindlimb in all analyses. Concepts like elastic or geometric similarity are inadequate for long bone scaling when the full range of body size in the sample is used. Taking all analyses into account, the differences in limb proportions are due more to phylogenetic relationships than to habitat. |
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Keywords: | Ruminantia scaling elastic similarity geometric similarity |
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