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Journal ArticleDOI

Standardized descriptions of primate locomotor and postural modes

TLDR
32 primate positional modes are defined, divided more finely into 52 postural sub-modes and 74 locomotor sub-Modes, and a nomenclature is recommended that is not dedicated to or derived from any one taxonomic subset of the primates.
Abstract
As quantitative studies on primate positional behavior accumulate the lack of a standard positional mode terminology is becoming an increasingly serious deficiency. Inconsistent use of traditional terms and inappropriate conflation of mode categories hamper interspecific and interobserver comparisons. Some workers use common terms without definition, allowing at least the possibility of misunderstanding. Other researchers coin neologisms tailored to their study species and not clearly enough defined to allow application to other species. Such neologisms may overlap, may completely encompass, or may conflate previously defined labels. The result is, at best, the proliferation of synonyms and, at worst, the creation of confusion where clarity had existed. Historical precedents have sometimes resulted in “catch-all” terms that conflate any number of kinematically different behaviors (e.g. “brachiation,” “climbing,” and “quadrumanous climbing”). We recognize three areas where distinction of positional modes has some current importance: (1) Modes that require humeral abduction should be distinguished from adducted behaviors; (2) locomotor modes that involve ascent or descent should be distinguished from horizontal locomotor modes; and (3) suspensory modes should be distinguished from supported modes. We recommend a nomenclature that is not dedicated to or derived from any one taxonomic subset of the primates. Here we define 32 primate positional modes, divided more finely into 52 postural sub-modes and 74 locomotor sub-modes.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Ticks, Hair Loss, and Non-Clinging Babies: A Novel Tick-Based Hypothesis for the Evolutionary Divergence of Humans and Chimpanzees.

Jeffrey G. Brown
- 12 May 2021 - 
TL;DR: A tick-based evolutionary hypothesis was proposed in this article, where forest fragmentation in hominin paleoenvironments created conditions that were favorable for tick proliferation, selecting for hair loss in homINins and grooming behaviour in chimpanzees as divergent anti-tick strategies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparative analysis of femoral biomechanical neck length in primates.

TL;DR: Results of additional analyses that included prosimian primates suggest that relatively long biomechanical necks characterize species adapted to hind limb‐dominated forms of locomotion, which is useful for signaling reliance on bipedalism or leaping, including subtle variation in leaping performance among arboreal quadrupeds.
Journal ArticleDOI

Shape variation in the talus and medial cuneiform of chimpanzees and bonobos

TL;DR: In this article , the shape variation in 126 talus and 127 medial cuneiform 3D surface models acquired from 108 chimpanzees (24 western, four Nigeria-Cameroon, 33 central, 32 eastern, and 15 captive unknowns) and 22 bonobos.
Journal ArticleDOI

The northern treeshrew (Scandentia: Tupaiidae: Tupaia belangeri) in the context of primate locomotor evolution: A comprehensive analysis of gait, positional, and grasping behavior.

TL;DR: It is found that northern treeshrews were primarily arboreal and shared their activities between quadrupedalism, climbing and leaping in rates similar to fat-tailed dwarf lemurs, raising the possibility that many of the locomotor and grasping characteristics considered to be "uniquely" primate may ultimately be features consistent with Euarchonta.
Journal ArticleDOI

Suspensory behavior and its role in positional activities of Japanese macaques.

TL;DR: Of all age groups, infants used the various types of suspension most frequently, and the frequency declined rapidly with age, so suspension was used as a safety device by infants, to prevent falling down from supports when losing balance.
References
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Book

Primate Adaptation and Evolution

TL;DR: This new edition brings this coverage up to date with the latest fossil finds and most current research, and retains its grounding in the extant primate groups as the best way to understand the fossil trail and the evolution of these modern forms.
Journal ArticleDOI

The behaviour and ecology of wild orang-utans (Pongo pygmaeus)

TL;DR: Comparison between several populations revealed an interesting mechanisms for the natural regulation of animal numbers and differences between Bornean and Sumatran orang-utans are discussed in relation to the zoogeography of these two islands.
Journal ArticleDOI

Locomotor behavior, body size, and comparative ecology of seven Surinam monkeys

TL;DR: There are no consistent associations between diet and either locomotor behavior or forest utilization; rather, monkeys with similar diets show locomotor and habitat differentiation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Primate Adaptation and Evolution.

TL;DR: For many years John Fleagle's text on the adaptation and evolution of primates and early hominoid fossils was the the text of choice for teachers and research workers alike as discussed by the authors.
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