The DeMoL proposal focused on studying the relationship between skeletal design (form) and animal behaviour (through functional morphology and biomechanics) and how this relationship is influenced by the bone mechanical environment, as well as the phylogenetic and developmental control of bone morphology. In turn, this will allow making inferences on the locomotor affinities of Miocene hominoids, which is a key group of extinct primates to better understand the origin and evolution of the positional behaviours of living apes, including human bipedalism, because they already display some (but not all) of the postcranial morphological traits of extant hominoids and they have shown similar biomechanical requirements to human bipedalism.
Results derived from this research will contribute to increase the knowledge about primate evolution and palaeobiology, in particular, about how the evolution of our own way of moving and displace originated and evolved. Therefore, the project has inherent interest for society since it takes an important part of our own history as a species. The project outcomes will be also of interest for those students involved in the Earth Sciences disciplines, as well as to conservationists, public policy makers, and industries related to the field of Biodiversity in general for the following reasons. Palaeontology has become essential along time to understand future issues through a better comprehension of the past. During the last decades, this discipline has had a very strong commitment with Earth's ecosystems and biodiversity conservation policies, since results from different branches of the field of Palaeontology have provided important data to understand current and future species biogeographic distributions and responses under the effects of the global warming (which, in turn, have important social and economic implications). Such results allow designing effective strategies for the conservation of endangered species in the territory that are priceless nowadays. Therefore, Palaeontology brings us the opportunity to better understand the process and causes of extinction among different groups of animals through geological time by identifying how these taxa have historically responded to climatic instability and changes in their local conditions, as well as better understanding their bone response through biomechanics, development and ageing. Having a broad knowledge about the evolutionary path of apes will allow us to predict how they will develop in the future and establish conservation plans and policies, as well as conscious and responsible measures to preserve primate biodiversity.
The DeMoL proposal had two main objectives: 1) deciphering how loading regimes influence bone design on living primates’ hind limb through the identification of the predominant bone loadings and investigating the influence of phylogenetic relatedness on specific traits; and 2) shed light on the origin, tempo and mode of the positional behaviour evolution of the hominoid primates by applying the functional runes generated in extant primates to the extinct taxa.