83 K. D’Août and E.E. Vereecke (eds.), Primate Locomotion: Linking Field and Laboratory
Research, Developments in Primatology: Progress and Prospects,
DOI 10.1007/978-1-4419-1420-0_6, © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2011
Abstract Primates are endowed with a great repertoire of locomotor and
nonlocomotor abilities, for which they rely on their powerful prehensile hind limbs
and their skilled and mobile forelimbs. The overall mobility of the forelimb
depends to a considerable degree on structure and function of the shoulder region
but only scant information about the detailed motion of the primate shoulder is
available so far. Therefore, we investigated shoulder movements during locomotion
in four arboreal quadruped primates using high-speed cineradiography. Together
with previous radiographic studies, four different patterns of combined scapular
and humeral excursions can be identified that differ in the degree of dorsolateral
scapular motion and mediolateral glenohumeral mobility. It becomes obvious that
the overall shoulder mobility in primates is affected by scapular mobility on one
hand and glenohumeral mobility on the other hand, but the two components of
shoulder mobility likely evolved, to some extent, independently. Finding morpho-
logical correlates to the observed motion patterns, however, is difficult because
morphometric features likely determine the maximum range of shoulder motion,
which is not necessarily the motion range that occurs during locomotor activities
of the forelimb. For a better understanding of the great variability in shoulder
morphology, future studies both in the field and the laboratory should focus on
the overall repertoire of shoulder function in primates. Only the combined effort
of both research strategies will enhance our understanding of the evolution of this
morphofunctional complex in primates.
Keywords Clavicle• Eulemur fulvus• Microcebus murinus• Saguinus oedipus
• Saimiri sciureus•Scapulashapeshoulderkinematics•Thorax
M. Schmidt (*)
Institut für Spezielle Zoologie and Evolutionsbiologie, Friedrich Schiller
Universität Jena, Germany
e-mail: schmidt.manuela@uni-jena.de
Chapter 6
Scapula Movements and Their Contribution
to Three-Dimensional Forelimb Excursions
in Quadrupedal Primates
Manuela Schmidt and Cornelia Krause