Chewing on different food types is a demanding biological function. The classic assumption in studying the shape of feeding apparatuses is that animals are what they eat, meaning that adaptation to different food items accounts for most of their interspecific variation. Yet, a growing body of evidence points against this concept. We use the primate mandible as a model structure to investigate the complex interplay among shape, size, diet, and phylogeny. We find a weak but significant impact of diet on mandible shape variation in primates as a whole but not in anthropoids and catarrhines as tested in isolation. These clades mainly exhibit allometric shape changes, which are unrelated to diet. Diet is an important factor in the diversification of...
An on-going debate concerning the dietary adaptations of archaic hominins and early Homo has been fu...
This thesis examines the association between diet and the mandibular morphology in non-human primate...
More than half a century ago, Percy Butler touted the importance of analyzing teeth to understand th...
Chewing on different food types is a demanding biological function. The classic assumption in studyi...
Chewing on different food types is a demanding biological function. The classic assumption in studyi...
Chewing on different food types is a demanding biological function. The classic assumption in studyi...
Chewing on different food types is a demanding biological function. The classic assumption in studyi...
Chewing on different food types is a demanding biological function. The classic assumption in studyi...
New World monkeys (order Primates) are an example of a major mammalian evolutionary radiation in the...
Recent investigations into the functional link between diet and form have focused on rigorous quanti...
Members of the hominins – the ‘australopiths’ and the species of Homo –possess short and deep mandib...
Members of the hominins – the ‘australopiths’ and the species of Homo –possess short and deep mandib...
Members of the hominins – namely the so-called ‘australopiths’ and the species of the genus Homo – a...
Abstract Attempts to establish relationships between mandibular morphology and either traditional di...
Within the genus Homo, we observe a decrease in mandibular robusticity and in the size of anterior a...
An on-going debate concerning the dietary adaptations of archaic hominins and early Homo has been fu...
This thesis examines the association between diet and the mandibular morphology in non-human primate...
More than half a century ago, Percy Butler touted the importance of analyzing teeth to understand th...
Chewing on different food types is a demanding biological function. The classic assumption in studyi...
Chewing on different food types is a demanding biological function. The classic assumption in studyi...
Chewing on different food types is a demanding biological function. The classic assumption in studyi...
Chewing on different food types is a demanding biological function. The classic assumption in studyi...
Chewing on different food types is a demanding biological function. The classic assumption in studyi...
New World monkeys (order Primates) are an example of a major mammalian evolutionary radiation in the...
Recent investigations into the functional link between diet and form have focused on rigorous quanti...
Members of the hominins – the ‘australopiths’ and the species of Homo –possess short and deep mandib...
Members of the hominins – the ‘australopiths’ and the species of Homo –possess short and deep mandib...
Members of the hominins – namely the so-called ‘australopiths’ and the species of the genus Homo – a...
Abstract Attempts to establish relationships between mandibular morphology and either traditional di...
Within the genus Homo, we observe a decrease in mandibular robusticity and in the size of anterior a...
An on-going debate concerning the dietary adaptations of archaic hominins and early Homo has been fu...
This thesis examines the association between diet and the mandibular morphology in non-human primate...
More than half a century ago, Percy Butler touted the importance of analyzing teeth to understand th...