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Growth rates and phylogeny in primates
Author(s) -
Gavan James A.,
Swindler Daris R.
Publication year - 1966
Publication title -
american journal of physical anthropology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.146
H-Index - 119
eISSN - 1096-8644
pISSN - 0002-9483
DOI - 10.1002/ajpa.1330240206
Subject(s) - primate , homo sapiens , biology , phylogenetics , growth rate , period (music) , growth spurt , nonhuman primate , physiology , zoology , evolutionary biology , endocrinology , genetics , ecology , mathematics , anthropology , geometry , physics , sociology , acoustics , gene
There is sufficient evidence to indicate that man grows for a longer period of time than chimpanzee who in turn has a greater duration of growth than rhesus monkey. The problem of this paper was to determine if there was a concomitant decrease in a rate of growth. Using the relative growth rate of Fisher ('21), it appears that for most of their period of growth, the rate of change is the same. Immediately after birth, when we have no data for children, rhesus monkey grows significantly faster than chimpanzee. By a year and a half their rates are the same, and neither species shows a sex difference. From seven years (age of youngest children) until children start through puberty, there is no sex difference in Homo sapiens , and the human rate does not differ from the chimpanzee rate. Because of the resemblance between the primate curve for rate and that for dairy cattle, it is postulated that this curve is more mammalian than primate and that during phylogeny the primates have merely increased the duration of time when growth is possible. Man does show one new feature, the puberal growth spurt, which is not found in the non‐human data considered. The implications of these conclusions for primate phylogeny and for growth are discussed.