The only
primates to have an APL completely separated from the
extensor pollicis brevis are
modern humans and
gibbons. In gibbons, however, the APL originates proximally on the radius and ulna, whereas it originates in the middle part of these bones in
crab-eating monkeys,
bonobos, and humans. In all these primates, the muscle is inserted onto the base of the first metacarpal and sometimes onto the trapezium (
siamangs and bonobos) and thumb sesamoids (crab-eating monkeys). In
chimpanzees, the APL flexes the thumb rather than extending it like in modern humans. Compared to the wrists of chimpanzees, the human wrist is
derived (compared to the
Pan-Homo LCA) in having considerably longer muscle
moment arms for a range of hand muscles. It is possible that these differences are due to the
supinated position of the trapezium in humans which, in its turn, is a result of the expansion of the trapezoid on the side of the palm. A small, lens-shaped radial
sesamoid embedded into the APL tendon is a
primitive state found in all known
Carnivora genera except in the
red and
giant pandas and the extinct
Simocyon where it is
hypertrophied (enlarged) into a sixth digit or a so-called "false thumb", a derived
trait that first appeared in
ursids. The APL sesamoid is present in all non-human primates, but only in about half of
gorillas, and normally absent in humans. ==Gallery==