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Ontogeny of long bone geometry in capuchin monkeys (Cebus albifrons and Cebus apella): Implications for locomotor development and life history

Young, Jesse W.; Fernandez, D.; Fleagle, John G.

Authors

Jesse W. Young

John G. Fleagle



Abstract

Studies of a diverse array of animals have found that young individuals often have robust bones for their body size (i.e. augmented crosssectional dimensions), limiting fracture risk despite general musculoskeletal immaturity. However, previous research has focused primarily on precocial taxa (e.g. rodents, lagomorphs, bovids, goats and emu). In this study, we examined the ontogenetic scaling of humeral and femoral cross-sectional robusticity in a mixedlongitudinal sample of two slow-growing, behaviourally altricial capuchin monkeys. Results showed that, when regressed against biomechanically appropriate size variables (i.e. the product of body mass and bone length), humeral and femoral bending strengths generally scale with negative allometry, matching the scaling patterns observed in previous studies of more precocial mammals. Additionally, bone strength relative to predicted loads (e.g. 'safety factors') peaks at birth and rapidly decreases during postnatal growth, falling to less than 5 per cent of peak values by weaning age. We suggest that increased safety factors during early ontogeny may be an adaptation to mitigate injury from falling during initial locomotor efforts. Overall, the results presented here suggest that ontogenetic declines in relative long bone strength may represent a common pattern among mammals that is perhaps preadaptive for different purposes among different lineages. © 2009 The Royal Society.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Oct 8, 2009
Online Publication Date Oct 28, 2009
Publication Date Apr 23, 2010
Deposit Date Jun 12, 2017
Journal Biology Letters
Electronic ISSN 1744-957X
Publisher Royal Society, The
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 6
Issue 2
Pages 197-200
DOI https://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2009.0773
Keywords cross-sectional geometry, allometry, ontogeny, biomechanics, locomotion
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/992315
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2009.0773
Contract Date Jun 12, 2017