DISAMPING KANAN INI.............
PLEASE USE ........ "TRANSLATE MACHINE" .. GOOGLE TRANSLATE BESIDE RIGHT THIS
.....................................
Data Tungkai
depan tulang memprediksi gaya predator
Forelimb
bone data predicts predator style
Date:
June 30,
2014
Source:
Brown University
Summary:
In their quest to understand what kind of hunter the
extinct marsupial Thylacine was, two paleobiologists built a dataset of
forelimb bone measurements that predict the predation style of a wide variety
of carnivorous mammals.
...........................
In their quest to understand what kind of hunter the extinct
marsupial thylacine was, two paleobiologists built a dataset of forelimb bone
measurements that predict the predation style of a wide variety of carnivorous
mammals. They describe the data in a study posted online in the Journal of Morphology.
At the start
of their research, paleobiologists Christine Janis and Borja Figueirido simply
wanted to determine the hunting style of an extinct marsupial called thylacine
(also known as the "marsupial wolf" or the "Tasmanian
tiger"). In the end, the Australian relic, which has a very dog-like head
but both cat- and dog-like features in the skeleton, proved to be uniquely
unspecialized, but what emerged from the effort is a new classification system
that can capably predict the hunting behaviors of mammals from measurements of
just a few forelimb bones.
"We
realized what we are also doing was providing a dataset or a framework whereby
people could look at extinct animals because it provides a good categorization
of extant forms," said Janis, professor of ecology and evolutionary
biology at Brown University, and co-author of a paper describing the framework
in the Journal of Morphology.
For example,
the scapulas (shoulder blades) of leopards (ambush predators who grapple with
rather than chase their prey) and those of cheetahs (pursuit predators who
chase their prey over a longer distance) measure very differently. So do their
radius (forearm) bones. The shapes of the bones, including areas where muscles
attach, place the cheetahs with other animals that evolved for chasing (mainly
dogs), and the leopards with others that evolved for grappling (mostly other
big cats).
"The
main differences in the forelimbs really reflect adaptations for strength
versus adaptations for speed," Janis said.
In plots of
the data in the paper, cheetahs and African hunting dogs appear to be brethren
by their scapular proportions even though one is a cat and one is a dog. But
the similar scapulas don't lie: both species are acknowledged by zoologists to
be pursuit predators.
In all,
Janis and Figueirido of the Universidad de Malaga in Spain made 44 measurements
on five forelimb bones in 62 specimens of 37 species ranging from the Arctic
fox to the thylacine. In various analyses the data proved helpful in sorting
out the behaviors of the bones' owners. Given measurements from all of the
forelimb bones of an animal, for example, they could accurately separate ambush
predators from pursuit predators 100 percent of the time and ambush predators from
pouncing predators 95 percent of the time. Results were similar for analyses
based on the humerus (upper arm bone). They were always able to make correct
classifications between the three predator styles more than 70 percent of the
time, even with just one kind of bone.
The elusive
thylacine
The
thylacine has not been known on mainland Australia in recorded human history,
and by official accounts it disappeared from the Australian island of Tasmania
by 1936 (although some locals still believe they may be around). In a similar
vein, the beasts evaded Janis and Figueirido's attempts at a neat
classification of their mode of carnivory. By some bones they were ambushers.
By others they were pursuers. In the end, they weren't anything but thylacines.
Janis notes
that they could do just fine as generalists, given their relative lack of
competition. Historically Australia has hosted less predator diversity than the
Serengeti, for example.
"If you
are one the few predators in the ecosystem, there's not a lot of pressure to be
specialized," she said.
In the
thylacine's case the evidence from forelimb bone measurements supports their
somewhat unusual status as generalists by the standards of other predatory
mammals. For other extinct predators, the framework will support other
conclusions based on these same standards.
"One
thing you tend to see is that people want to make extinct animals like living
ones, so if something has a wolf-like head with a long snout as does the
thylacine, although its skull is more delicate than that of a wolf, then people
want to make it into a wolf-like runner," she said. "But very few
extinct animals actually are as specialized as modern-day pursuit predators.
People reconstruct things in the image of the familiar, which may not reflect
reality."
Janis said
she hopes the framework will provide fellow paleobiologists with an empirical
basis for guiding those determinations.
The Bushnell
Foundation supported the study with a research and teaching grant. The Museum
of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University, the American Museum of Natural
History in New York, and Australia's Museum Victoria and Queensland Museum
provided access to specimens for measurement.
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by Brown University. Note: Materials may be edited for content and
length.
Journal
Reference:
- Christine M. Janis, Borja Figueirido. Forelimb anatomy and the discrimination of the predatory behavior of carnivorous mammals: The thylacine as a case study. Journal of Morphology, 2014; DOI: 10.1002/jmor.20303
