News Release

Maternal pelvis and fetal skull covariation

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

CT renderings of mother-fetus dyads of rhesus macaques

image: CT renderings of mother-fetus dyads of rhesus macaques view more 

Credit: Image credit: Naoki Morimoto

A study using CT scans of fetal skull and maternal pelvis covariation in pregnancies of 12 rhesus macaques finds that covariation occurs in such a way as to ease the passage of the fetal head through the birth canal; the results suggest that bipedalism, which was previously hypothesized to drive fetal skull and maternal pelvis covariation in humans, is not required to produce such covariation, according to the authors.

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Article #20-02112: "Covariation of fetal skull and maternal pelvis during the perinatal period in rhesus macaques and evolution of childbirth in primates," by Mikaze Kawada, Masato Nakatsukasa, Takeshi Nishimura, Akihisa Kaneko, and Naoki Morimoto.

MEDIA CONTACTS: Naoki Morimoto, Kyoto University, JAPAN; e-mail: morimoto@anthro.zool.kyoto-u.ac.jp; Mikaze Kawada, Kyoto University, JAPAN; e-mail: kawada@anthro.zool.kyoto-u.ac.jp


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