1 results match your criteria: "M263 Medical Sciences Building One Hospital Drive DC055.07[Affiliation]"

Septa and processes: convergent evolution of the orbit in haplorhine primates and strigiform birds.

J Hum Evol

December 2009

Department of Pathology and Anatomical Sciences, University of Missouri School of Medicine, M263 Medical Sciences Building One Hospital Drive DC055.07, Columbia, MO 65212, USA.

According to the "nocturnal visual predation hypothesis" (NVPH), the convergent eyes and orbits of primates result from selection for improved stereoscopic depth perception to facilitate manual capture of prey at night. Within primates, haplorhines share additional derived orbital morphologies, including a postorbital septum and greater orbital convergence than any other mammalian clade. While the homology and function of the haplorhine septum remain controversial, experimental data suggest that septa evolved to inhibit mechanical disturbance of the orbital contents by the anterior temporalis muscle during mastication.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF