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Beyond Dimorphism: Body Size Variation Among Adult Orangutans Is Not Dichotomous by Sex

Among extant great apes, orangutans are considered the most sexually dimorphic in body size. However, the expression of sexual dimorphism in orangutans is more complex than simply males being larger than females. At sexual maturity, some male orangutans develop cheek pads (flanges), while other male...

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Autores principales: Kralick, Alexandra E, O'Connell, Caitlin A, Bastian, Meredith L, Hoke, Morgan K, Zemel, Babette S, Schurr, Theodore G, Tocheri, Matthew W
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10563650/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37061788
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/icb/icad015
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author Kralick, Alexandra E
O'Connell, Caitlin A
Bastian, Meredith L
Hoke, Morgan K
Zemel, Babette S
Schurr, Theodore G
Tocheri, Matthew W
author_facet Kralick, Alexandra E
O'Connell, Caitlin A
Bastian, Meredith L
Hoke, Morgan K
Zemel, Babette S
Schurr, Theodore G
Tocheri, Matthew W
author_sort Kralick, Alexandra E
collection PubMed
description Among extant great apes, orangutans are considered the most sexually dimorphic in body size. However, the expression of sexual dimorphism in orangutans is more complex than simply males being larger than females. At sexual maturity, some male orangutans develop cheek pads (flanges), while other males remain unflanged even after becoming reproductively capable. Sometimes flange development is delayed in otherwise sexually mature males for a few years. In other cases, flange development is delayed for many years or decades, with some males even spending their entire lifespan as unflanged adults. Thus, unflanged males of various chronological ages can be mistakenly identified as “subadults.” Unflanged adult males are typically described as “female-sized,” but this may simply reflect the fact that unflanged male body size has only ever been measured in peri-pubescent individuals. In this study, we measured the skeletons of 111 wild adult orangutans (Pongo spp.), including 20 unflanged males, 45 flanged males, and 46 females, resulting in the largest skeletal sample of unflanged males yet studied. We assessed long bone lengths (as a proxy for stature) for all 111 individuals and recorded weights-at-death, femoral head diameters, bi-iliac breadths, and long bone cross-sectional areas (CSA) (as proxies for mass) for 27 of these individuals, including seven flanged males, three adult confirmed-unflanged males, and three young adult likely-unflanged males. ANOVA and Kruskal–Wallis tests with Tukey and Dunn post-hoc pairwise comparisons, respectively, showed that body sizes for young adult unflanged males are similar to those of the adult females in the sample (all P ≥ 0.09 except bi-iliac breadth), whereas body sizes for adult unflanged males ranged between those of adult flanged males and adult females for several measurements (all P < 0.001). Thus, sexually mature male orangutans exhibit body sizes that range from the female end of the spectrum to the flanged male end of the spectrum. These results exemplify that the term “sexual dimorphism” fails to capture the full range of variation in adult orangutan body size. By including adult unflanged males in analyses of body size and other aspects of morphology, not as aberrations but as an expected part of orangutan variation, we may begin to shift the way that we think about features typically considered dichotomous according to biological sex.
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spelling pubmed-105636502023-10-11 Beyond Dimorphism: Body Size Variation Among Adult Orangutans Is Not Dichotomous by Sex Kralick, Alexandra E O'Connell, Caitlin A Bastian, Meredith L Hoke, Morgan K Zemel, Babette S Schurr, Theodore G Tocheri, Matthew W Integr Comp Biol Symposium Among extant great apes, orangutans are considered the most sexually dimorphic in body size. However, the expression of sexual dimorphism in orangutans is more complex than simply males being larger than females. At sexual maturity, some male orangutans develop cheek pads (flanges), while other males remain unflanged even after becoming reproductively capable. Sometimes flange development is delayed in otherwise sexually mature males for a few years. In other cases, flange development is delayed for many years or decades, with some males even spending their entire lifespan as unflanged adults. Thus, unflanged males of various chronological ages can be mistakenly identified as “subadults.” Unflanged adult males are typically described as “female-sized,” but this may simply reflect the fact that unflanged male body size has only ever been measured in peri-pubescent individuals. In this study, we measured the skeletons of 111 wild adult orangutans (Pongo spp.), including 20 unflanged males, 45 flanged males, and 46 females, resulting in the largest skeletal sample of unflanged males yet studied. We assessed long bone lengths (as a proxy for stature) for all 111 individuals and recorded weights-at-death, femoral head diameters, bi-iliac breadths, and long bone cross-sectional areas (CSA) (as proxies for mass) for 27 of these individuals, including seven flanged males, three adult confirmed-unflanged males, and three young adult likely-unflanged males. ANOVA and Kruskal–Wallis tests with Tukey and Dunn post-hoc pairwise comparisons, respectively, showed that body sizes for young adult unflanged males are similar to those of the adult females in the sample (all P ≥ 0.09 except bi-iliac breadth), whereas body sizes for adult unflanged males ranged between those of adult flanged males and adult females for several measurements (all P < 0.001). Thus, sexually mature male orangutans exhibit body sizes that range from the female end of the spectrum to the flanged male end of the spectrum. These results exemplify that the term “sexual dimorphism” fails to capture the full range of variation in adult orangutan body size. By including adult unflanged males in analyses of body size and other aspects of morphology, not as aberrations but as an expected part of orangutan variation, we may begin to shift the way that we think about features typically considered dichotomous according to biological sex. Oxford University Press 2023-04-14 /pmc/articles/PMC10563650/ /pubmed/37061788 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/icb/icad015 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Symposium
Kralick, Alexandra E
O'Connell, Caitlin A
Bastian, Meredith L
Hoke, Morgan K
Zemel, Babette S
Schurr, Theodore G
Tocheri, Matthew W
Beyond Dimorphism: Body Size Variation Among Adult Orangutans Is Not Dichotomous by Sex
title Beyond Dimorphism: Body Size Variation Among Adult Orangutans Is Not Dichotomous by Sex
title_full Beyond Dimorphism: Body Size Variation Among Adult Orangutans Is Not Dichotomous by Sex
title_fullStr Beyond Dimorphism: Body Size Variation Among Adult Orangutans Is Not Dichotomous by Sex
title_full_unstemmed Beyond Dimorphism: Body Size Variation Among Adult Orangutans Is Not Dichotomous by Sex
title_short Beyond Dimorphism: Body Size Variation Among Adult Orangutans Is Not Dichotomous by Sex
title_sort beyond dimorphism: body size variation among adult orangutans is not dichotomous by sex
topic Symposium
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10563650/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37061788
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/icb/icad015
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