Quadruped
|
The Zebra is an example of a quadruped. |
Quadrupedalism (from Latin, meaning "four legs") is a form of
land animal locomotion using four
legs. The majority of walking animals are quadrupeds, including
mammals such as
cattle and
cats, and
reptiles, like
lizards.
Birds,
humans,
insects,
crustaceans, and
snakes are not quadrupeds.
Not all four-limbed animals are quadrupeds. Although arms and wings are, in the evolutionary sense, modified legs, four-limbed animals are in fact classed as
tetrapods – members of the
taxonomic unit
Tetrapoda. These include all
vertebrates with quadrupedal ancestors, including
mammals,
reptiles,
amphibians, and
birds.
The distinction between quadrupeds and tetrapods is important in evolutionary biology, particularly in the context of
bipeds, winged animals, and animals whose limbs have adapted to other roles (e.g.
fins, in the case of
cetaceans and
pinnipeds). All of these animals are tetrapods, but none are quadrupeds. Even
snakes, whose limbs have become entirely
vestigial, are nevertheless tetrapods.
In July of
2005, in rural
Turkey, scientists discovered five
Kurdish siblings who had learned to walk naturally on their hands and feet. Unlike
chimpanzees, who ambulate
on their knuckles, the
Turkish siblings (ranging from 18 to 34 years old) walked on their palms, allowing them to preserve the dexterity of their fingers. Calluses found on their hands make the possibility of a hoax unlikely. Another similar case has been reported in Chile, but the case is still being investigated and reports are not released as of March 22,
2006.
The discovery of the family has provided scientists a unique view into human evolutionary history. Nicholas Humphrey, a researcher from the
London School of Economics, has
suggested that the siblings' gait is an instinctive human behavior which has simply been abandoned over the course of evolution. Humphrey argues that the five siblings, who suffer from
mental retardation doi doi related to
cerebellar ataxia, have regressed to an earlier stage of human evolution, and have simply continued to walk "as infants" into adulthood.
Other scientists, such as Stefan Mundlos of the
Max Planck Institute, believe that the family's unusual gait
may result from a genetic abnormality. Mundlos has isolated a gene on
chromosome 17 which is responsible for human
bipedalism. He speculates that the Turkish siblings lack this gene.