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Ecogeographic patterns in fetal limb proportions
Author(s) -
Waxenbaum Erin B.,
Warren Michael W.,
Holliday Trenton W.,
Byrd John E.,
Cole Theodore M.
Publication year - 2019
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.23814
Subject(s) - allometry , biology , body proportions , population , trunk , lower limb , nasion , zoology , demography , anatomy , ecology , sociology , medicine , mathematics , geometry , surgery
Objectives Humans generally comply with the ecological rule of Allen (1877), with populations from tropical environments exhibiting body proportions in which limb segments are long relative to trunk height compared to temperate groups. This study tests whether ecogeographic differences in intralimb proportions are identifiable among two modern fetal samples of differing ancestry. Materials and methods Data are derived from radiographic measurements of long bone diaphyseal length and crown‐heel length (CHL) of contemporary, spontaneously aborted fetuses of African Americans (“black”) of assumed African (tropical) ancestry and European Americans (“white”) of assumed European (temperate) ancestry ( n = 184). Population individual limb elements, brachial, and crural indices are compared via analyses of covariance (ANCOVA). Potential patterns of divergent allometric growth are quantified through principal components analysis (PCA). Results African ancestral distal limb elements were consistently, albeit slightly, longer than those of European ancestry, relative to CHL. None of the ANCOVA interactions with ancestry are statistically significant for limb indices. The radius was the only single element that displayed a statistically significant ancestry effect ( p = 0.0435) equating to a 1 mm difference. PCA highlights that upper limbs demonstrate negative allometry and lower limbs demonstrate positive allometry with sample‐specific multivariate growth patterns being nearly identical. Differences in growth allometry late in gestation make little contribution to observed differences in adult limb proportions. Discussion No statistically significant ecogeographic patterns were appreciated among intralimb proportions between these groups during the fetal period. This study contributes to a greater appreciation of phenotypic plasticity, ecogeographic variation in ontogeny, and the evolution of modern human diversity.