Mobility and structural constraints of the bonobo trapeziometacarpal joint

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Titel: Mobility and structural constraints of the bonobo trapeziometacarpal joint
Autoren: Van Leeuwen, Timo, Vanneste, Maarten, Kerkhof, Faes, D'Agostino, Priscilla, Vanhoof, Marie, Stevens, Jeroen, van Lenthe, G., Vereecke, Evie
Quelle: Biological journal of the Linnean Society
Verlagsinformationen: Oxford University Press (OUP), 2018.
Publikationsjahr: 2018
Schlagwörter: 0301 basic medicine, Evolutionary Biology, 0303 health sciences, Science & Technology, THUMB, PRECISION GRIPS, thumb, thumb ligaments, trapeziometcarpal joint, TOOL-USE, LIGAMENTS, METACARPAL JOINT, Pan paniscus, HAND, 06 Biological Sciences, KNUCKLE-WALKING, IN-VIVO KINEMATICS, 03 medical and health sciences, ARTICULAR SURFACE, primate anatomy, CHIMPANZEES PAN-TROGLODYTES, Biology, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, 3104 Evolutionary biology
Beschreibung: sponsorship: This paper was a contribution to a European Federation for Primatology symposium on 'What an interdisciplinary approach can tell us about the evolution of grasping and manipulation' held 21-25 August 2017 at the University of Strasbourg in France and organized by Emmanuelle Pouydebat and Ameline Bardo, the proceedings of which have been collated as a Special Issue of the Biological Journal of the Linnean Society (2019). The authors thank the Bonobo Morphology Initiative organized in January 2016 by Dr Nauwelaerts and Dr Pereboom from the Centre for Research and Conservation (Royal Zoological Society Antwerp, Belgium) that enabled access to a large part of the bonobo specimens and allowed dissection of these specimens by an international team of anatomists. We are also grateful to the different zoos which provided additional bonobo specimens: Jean-Pascal Guery (La Vallee des Singes, Romagne, France), Christina Geiger (Zoo Frankfurt, Germany) and Martina Balz (Wilhelma Zoo, Stuttgart, Germany). Furthermore, we thank Dr Olivier Vanovermeire and Henk Lacaeyse from the Medical Imaging Department, AZ Groeninge (Kortrijk, Belgium) for performing CT scans of the specimens. Lastly, we thank reviewers Dr Tracy Kivell and Dr Biren Patel for their valuable input. Funding for this project was obtained from KU Leuven (project number: C14/16/082). (KU Leuven|C14/16/082)
Publikationsart: Article
Sprache: English
ISSN: 1095-8312
0024-4066
DOI: 10.1093/biolinnean/bly162
Zugangs-URL: https://lirias.kuleuven.be/bitstream/123456789/630159/2/van%20Leeuwen%20et%20al%202018%20BJLS.pdf
https://academic.oup.com/biolinnean/article-abstract/127/3/681/5194054
http://academic.oup.com/biolinnean/article-abstract/127/3/681/5194054
https://hdl.handle.net/10067/1629050151162165141
Rights: OUP Standard Publication Reuse
Dokumentencode: edsair.doi.dedup.....e6c60a70340bd2c487d43d61671c05b2
Datenbank: OpenAIRE
Beschreibung
Abstract:sponsorship: This paper was a contribution to a European Federation for Primatology symposium on 'What an interdisciplinary approach can tell us about the evolution of grasping and manipulation' held 21-25 August 2017 at the University of Strasbourg in France and organized by Emmanuelle Pouydebat and Ameline Bardo, the proceedings of which have been collated as a Special Issue of the Biological Journal of the Linnean Society (2019). The authors thank the Bonobo Morphology Initiative organized in January 2016 by Dr Nauwelaerts and Dr Pereboom from the Centre for Research and Conservation (Royal Zoological Society Antwerp, Belgium) that enabled access to a large part of the bonobo specimens and allowed dissection of these specimens by an international team of anatomists. We are also grateful to the different zoos which provided additional bonobo specimens: Jean-Pascal Guery (La Vallee des Singes, Romagne, France), Christina Geiger (Zoo Frankfurt, Germany) and Martina Balz (Wilhelma Zoo, Stuttgart, Germany). Furthermore, we thank Dr Olivier Vanovermeire and Henk Lacaeyse from the Medical Imaging Department, AZ Groeninge (Kortrijk, Belgium) for performing CT scans of the specimens. Lastly, we thank reviewers Dr Tracy Kivell and Dr Biren Patel for their valuable input. Funding for this project was obtained from KU Leuven (project number: C14/16/082). (KU Leuven|C14/16/082)
ISSN:10958312
00244066
DOI:10.1093/biolinnean/bly162