Growth and allometry in primate masticatory muscles

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Abstract

A study of the dry weights of primate and non-primate masticatory musculature permitted possible allometric and ontogenetic influences on this musculature to be explored. Using weight as an indicator of adult body size, all of the masticatory muscles examined (anterior temporalis, posterior temporalis, masseter, medial pterygoid, lateral pterygoid, digastrics, and total adductor mass) are isometric. This is true even when prosimians and non-primates are removed from consideration, leaving only adult anthropoid primates. Thus, size-related changes do not affect the masticatory musculature of anthropoids differently from the musculature of examined prosimians and non-primates. However, other measures of body size (skull length, head and body length) reveal a different picture. Yet, irrespective of the indicator of body size chosen, the allometric properties of the masticatory muscles appear similar and the fluctuations of the various muscle indices therefore reflect functional changes, and are not caused by allometry. Exudate-eating and frugivory are discussed in relation to body size and the development of the mandibular depressor muslces. The logs of the masticatory muscles do not show a significant correlation with age, except when species are followed across age grades. For the five anthropoid species for which this is possible, the medial and lateral pterygoid and digastric muscles are still not correlated with age. When all examined species are considered, some muscle ratios correlate significantly with age. Following anthropoid species across age grades singles out an early surge in growth of the medial pterygoid muscle over the masseter muscle, a situation which was apparent also in the general age correlation.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)287-293
Number of pages7
JournalArchives of Oral Biology
Volume29
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 1984

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Otorhinolaryngology
  • General Dentistry
  • Cell Biology

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