Arboreal animals with prehensile hands must balance the complex demands of bone strength, grasping and manipulation. An informative example of this problem is that of the aye-aye (Daubentonia madagascariensis), a rare lemuriform primate that is unusual in having exceptionally long, gracile fingers specialized for foraging. In addition, they are among the largest primates to engage in head-first descent on arboreal supports, a posture that should increase loads on their gracile digits. We test the hypothesis that aye-ayes will reduce pressure on their digits during locomotion by curling their fingers off the substrate. This hypothesis was tested using simultaneous videographic and pressure analysis of the hand, foot and digits for five adult...
Manual prehension, involved in food acquisition and locomotion, is common to all primates. However, ...
Differences in grip techniques used across primates are usually attributed to variation in thumb-fin...
Studies of primate taxonomy and phylogeny often depend on comparisons of limb dimensions, yet there ...
Evolution of the human hand has undergone a transition from use during locomotion to use primarily f...
<p>Primates and many other animals that move in an arboreal environment often cling, sometimes for l...
Phalangeal curvature is often used to infer arboreal locomotion in fossil primate species. This is b...
The human hand is a key anatomical area for understanding behavioural transitions in fossil hominins...
Biomechanical analyses of great ape arboreal locomotion in a natural environment are scarce, thus li...
<p>For primates, and other arboreal mammals, adopting suspensory locomotion represents one of the st...
Primate origins are subject to important controversies. The initial radiation of first Primates and ...
Vertical climbing has featured prominently in hypotheses of early hominoid evolution and the origins...
Previously, we described several features of the carpometacarpal joints in extant large-bodied apes ...
Although much is known about the terrestrial locomotion of great apes, their arboreal locomotion has...
Objectives: The dexterity of fossil hominins is often inferred by assessing the comparative manual a...
Objectives: Studies on grasping and limb posture during arboreal locomotion in great apes in their n...
Manual prehension, involved in food acquisition and locomotion, is common to all primates. However, ...
Differences in grip techniques used across primates are usually attributed to variation in thumb-fin...
Studies of primate taxonomy and phylogeny often depend on comparisons of limb dimensions, yet there ...
Evolution of the human hand has undergone a transition from use during locomotion to use primarily f...
<p>Primates and many other animals that move in an arboreal environment often cling, sometimes for l...
Phalangeal curvature is often used to infer arboreal locomotion in fossil primate species. This is b...
The human hand is a key anatomical area for understanding behavioural transitions in fossil hominins...
Biomechanical analyses of great ape arboreal locomotion in a natural environment are scarce, thus li...
<p>For primates, and other arboreal mammals, adopting suspensory locomotion represents one of the st...
Primate origins are subject to important controversies. The initial radiation of first Primates and ...
Vertical climbing has featured prominently in hypotheses of early hominoid evolution and the origins...
Previously, we described several features of the carpometacarpal joints in extant large-bodied apes ...
Although much is known about the terrestrial locomotion of great apes, their arboreal locomotion has...
Objectives: The dexterity of fossil hominins is often inferred by assessing the comparative manual a...
Objectives: Studies on grasping and limb posture during arboreal locomotion in great apes in their n...
Manual prehension, involved in food acquisition and locomotion, is common to all primates. However, ...
Differences in grip techniques used across primates are usually attributed to variation in thumb-fin...
Studies of primate taxonomy and phylogeny often depend on comparisons of limb dimensions, yet there ...