“…Specifically, it has been widely assumed that high levels of hip mobility should be particularly important for more acrobatic animals because they must reach for distantly and erratically positioned arboreal supports during bridging behaviors (Jenkins, 1972;Walker, 1974;Jenkins & Camazine, 1977;Ruff, 1988;Swartz, 1989;MacLatchy, 1995MacLatchy, , 1996MacLatchy, , 1998. Passive hip joint excursion data were recently collected for a broad sample of anthropoid primates to test this assumption (Hammond, 2013(Hammond, , 2014a(Hammond, , 2014b. These data showed that hip abduction and external rotation are significantly larger in more acrobatic arboreal species compared with monkeys that use primarily parasagittal limb postures (e.g., Macaca, Papio) (Hammond, 2013(Hammond, , 2014a(Hammond, , 2014b.…”