The influence of life history and sexual dimorphism on entheseal changes in modern humans and African great apes.

Entheseal changes have been widely studied with regard to their correlation to biomechanical stress and their usefulness for biocultural reconstructions. However, anthropological and medical studies have demonstrated the marked influence of both age and sex on the development of these features. Stud...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Marco Milella
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4175998?pdf=render
id doaj-1317150c5baf4a328964c81f02350913
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1317150c5baf4a328964c81f023509132020-11-25T00:59:37ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0199e10796310.1371/journal.pone.0107963The influence of life history and sexual dimorphism on entheseal changes in modern humans and African great apes.Marco MilellaEntheseal changes have been widely studied with regard to their correlation to biomechanical stress and their usefulness for biocultural reconstructions. However, anthropological and medical studies have demonstrated the marked influence of both age and sex on the development of these features. Studies of entheseal changes are mostly aimed in testing functional hypotheses and are mostly focused on modern humans, with few data available for non-human primates. The lack of comparative studies on the effect of age and sex on entheseal changes represent a gap in our understanding of the evolutionary basis of both development and degeneration of the human musculoskeletal system. The aim of the present work is to compare age trajectories and patterns of sexual dimorphism in entheseal changes between modern humans and African great apes. To this end we analyzed 23 postcranial entheses in a human contemporary identified skeletal collection (N = 484) and compared the results with those obtained from the analysis of Pan (N = 50) and Gorilla (N = 47) skeletal specimens. Results highlight taxon-specific age trajectories possibly linked to differences in life history schedules and phyletic relationships. Robusticity trajectories separate Pan and modern humans from Gorilla, whereas enthesopathic patterns are unique in modern humans and possibly linked to their extended potential lifespan. Comparisons between sexes evidence a decreasing dimorphism in robusticity from Gorilla, to modern humans to Pan, which is likely linked to the role played by size, lifespan and physical activity on robusticity development. The present study confirms previous hypotheses on the possible relevance of EC in the study of life history, pointing moreover to their usefulness in evolutionary studies.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4175998?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marco Milella
spellingShingle Marco Milella
The influence of life history and sexual dimorphism on entheseal changes in modern humans and African great apes.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Marco Milella
author_sort Marco Milella
title The influence of life history and sexual dimorphism on entheseal changes in modern humans and African great apes.
title_short The influence of life history and sexual dimorphism on entheseal changes in modern humans and African great apes.
title_full The influence of life history and sexual dimorphism on entheseal changes in modern humans and African great apes.
title_fullStr The influence of life history and sexual dimorphism on entheseal changes in modern humans and African great apes.
title_full_unstemmed The influence of life history and sexual dimorphism on entheseal changes in modern humans and African great apes.
title_sort influence of life history and sexual dimorphism on entheseal changes in modern humans and african great apes.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Entheseal changes have been widely studied with regard to their correlation to biomechanical stress and their usefulness for biocultural reconstructions. However, anthropological and medical studies have demonstrated the marked influence of both age and sex on the development of these features. Studies of entheseal changes are mostly aimed in testing functional hypotheses and are mostly focused on modern humans, with few data available for non-human primates. The lack of comparative studies on the effect of age and sex on entheseal changes represent a gap in our understanding of the evolutionary basis of both development and degeneration of the human musculoskeletal system. The aim of the present work is to compare age trajectories and patterns of sexual dimorphism in entheseal changes between modern humans and African great apes. To this end we analyzed 23 postcranial entheses in a human contemporary identified skeletal collection (N = 484) and compared the results with those obtained from the analysis of Pan (N = 50) and Gorilla (N = 47) skeletal specimens. Results highlight taxon-specific age trajectories possibly linked to differences in life history schedules and phyletic relationships. Robusticity trajectories separate Pan and modern humans from Gorilla, whereas enthesopathic patterns are unique in modern humans and possibly linked to their extended potential lifespan. Comparisons between sexes evidence a decreasing dimorphism in robusticity from Gorilla, to modern humans to Pan, which is likely linked to the role played by size, lifespan and physical activity on robusticity development. The present study confirms previous hypotheses on the possible relevance of EC in the study of life history, pointing moreover to their usefulness in evolutionary studies.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4175998?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT marcomilella theinfluenceoflifehistoryandsexualdimorphismonenthesealchangesinmodernhumansandafricangreatapes
AT marcomilella influenceoflifehistoryandsexualdimorphismonenthesealchangesinmodernhumansandafricangreatapes
_version_ 1725217332778762240