Brachiator

Brachiator

Brachiators are a type of primates mostly from the family Hylobatidae, which includes gibbons. Brachiators use their arms to move from tree branch to tree branch, through a process called brachiation. Their arms are longer than their legs, and are much more powerful. "Brachiation was traditionally used toexplain the morphology of hominids and other primates - i.e. because theyevolved the brachiating habit, they evolved the morphology they have....Pongines (orangutans)have long arms and supple hands, but detailed examination of their musculaturereveals that they really can't brachiate too well - same goes for hominines -... Brachiators by design are gibbons and spider monkeys, which have odd upper arm muscles and reduced thumbs."(http://dml.cmnh.org/1995Nov/msg00410.html)

"Female orang-utans are also brachiators - they are just less acrobatic about it than gibbons." (http://dml.cmnh.org/1995Nov/msg00347.html)

Brachiators began as four-footed monkey-like creatures in the Tertiary Era in Africa and Northern Europe. Eventually, the some of the monkeys began to use their arms to swing, and lost their tails, due to evolution. Without a tail, they ceased to be monkeys, and became apes with strong arms. Through the ages, the ape-like ancestors developed stronger arms and the shoulder blades moved from the side of their chests to the back of their bodies.

Most of these brachaiators were smaller than average apes, so were able to move through the trees easier than gorillas or orangutans, although female orangutans do brachiate through the trees occasionally. The brachiators held their bodies upright in the trees, and would sometimes go on the ground and walk upright. This helped them survive in the plains when the forests began to die, because they were so unfamiliar to the predators that they would not be attacked.

Brachiators have
*broad hip sockets
*broad upper bodies
*shoulder blades further back
*locking knee joints
*elongated heel bones
*aligned and longer big toes
*upright body position
*strong muscles behind the thighs and the pelvis
*bend in their loins
*slightly arched spine (S-shaped)
*hands adapted to grasping branches
*large incisors

(http://home13.inet.tele.dk/palm/homweb.htm)


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • brachiator — noun see brachiate …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • brachiator — /bray kee ay teuhr, brak ee /, n. an animal that can progress by means of brachiation, as a gibbon. [BRACHIATE + OR2] * * * …   Universalium

  • brachiator — n. animal that can advance by brachiation …   English contemporary dictionary

  • brachiator — brach·i·a·tor …   English syllables

  • brachiator — ˈ ̷ ̷ ̷ ̷ˌād.ə(r) noun ( s) : a brachiating animal * * * /bray kee ay teuhr, brak ee /, n. an animal that can progress by means of brachiation, as a gibbon. [BRACHIATE + OR2] …   Useful english dictionary

  • primate — primatal, adj., n. primatial /pruy may sheuhl/, primatical /pruy mat i keuhl/, adj. /pruy mayt/ or, esp. for 1, /pruy mit/, n. 1. Eccles. an archbishop or bishop ranking first among the bishops of a province or country. 2. any of various… …   Universalium

  • brachiate — intransitive verb ( ated; ating) Date: 1928 to progress by swinging from hold to hold by the arms < a brachiating gibbon > • brachiation noun • brachiator noun …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • Dryopithecus — Temporal range: 12–9 Ma …   Wikipedia

  • Climbing animals — There are a diverse range of climbing animals; animals that spend much of their time moving on steep, vertical, or overhanging surfaces and have appropriate adaptations for such scansorial locomotion. Climbing animals can be roughly divided into… …   Wikipedia

  • brachiation — noun Movement by swinging the arms from one hold to the next. Species that normally move by brachiation (swinging from hand to hand while hanging from supports) or vertical leaping and clinging require substantially different cage designs from… …   Wiktionary

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