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Body weight: Its relation to tissue composition, segment distribution, and motor function . I. Interspecific comparisons
Author(s) -
Grand Theodore I.
Publication year - 1977
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.1330470204
Subject(s) - biology , primate , sloth , anatomy , interspecific competition , zoology , sciurus , ecology , habitat
The composition of skin, muscle, and bone and their distribution throughout the body are compared for “advanced” or “specialized” species (Alouatta, Macaca, Canis, Felis, Lepus); smaller, more closely related species ( Tupaia and the Lorisidae); and several species within the same ecosystem (Barro Colorado Island, Panama). Among the most significant variables, the skin of sloths, howlers and macaques constitutes more than 12% of body weight, whereas greyhound skin is 5% of weight; sloth and howler muscle are 25% of weight, macaque muscle about 40% of weight, greyhound and agouti muscle over 50% of weight. In tree shrews and galagos muscle is heavier (35%) than in pottos and slow lorises (below 28%), but bone and skin are lighter. All species differ in the segmental distribution of weight. Cats have light tails, light feet and heavy thighs, whereas howlers have heavy tails, heavy feet, and light thighs. The galagos have heavy hindlimbs and tails, the pottos and lorises have reduced tails and approximately equal fore‐ and hindlimbs. Convergences in segment pattern (sloths with pottos and lorises, marmosets with tree shrews, owl monkeys with galagos, cebus with macaques) as well as divergences are documented. All weight‐of tissue and weight‐of‐segment variables are correlated directly with locomotor adaptation.