In addition to the normal five fingers on the forelimbs of most mammals, giant pandas also have a strongly enlarged wrist bone, the radial sesamoid bone, which acts as a sixth finger and forms an opposable "thumb" for grasping bamboo.

2024/05/0904:45:33 housepet 1943

The giant panda, which belongs to the order Carnivora, is different from its brothers. It has many "stunt skills" that allow it to adapt to a life of eating bamboo . Of these stunts, the giant panda's extra "thumb" is arguably the most famous but also the most mysterious. In addition to the normal five fingers on the forelimbs of most mammals, giant pandas also have a strongly enlarged wrist bone, the radial sesamoid bone, which acts as a sixth finger and forms an opposable "thumb" for grasping bamboo.

In addition to the normal five fingers on the forelimbs of most mammals, giant pandas also have a strongly enlarged wrist bone, the radial sesamoid bone, which acts as a sixth finger and forms an opposable

Picture source CCTV screenshot

Recently, the scientific research team of the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, in collaboration with colleagues, published in the international journal "Scientific Reports" the origin of the sixth finger of the panda , the evolution of the "pseudo-thumb" paper. The key pseudo-thumb and molar fossils of the primitive panda came from the scientific excavation of the late Miocene site of Shuitangba jointly organized by the Institute of Paleovertebra led by Deng Tao and Ji Xueping, the Yunnan Provincial Institute of Archeology, and the Zhaotong Municipal Government in 2015. Research results show that Eo-panda has the earliest enlarged radial sesamoid bone, which has formed the "thumb" function of the opposite grip. However, the panda's "thumb" has not increased further since the late Miocene, because it must not only grasp bamboo but also take into account the load-bearing function of walking in a plantar style, and cannot favor either side. Limitations in weight sharing may be the main reason why the panda's pseudo-thumb never evolved into a full finger, but this rudimentary "thumb" suggests that the giant panda's habit of exclusively eating bamboo originated at least 7 to 6 million years ago. .

Source: Sichuan News Network

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