In the Chiroptera both humerus and radius are exceedingly long and slender; the ulna is reduced to little more than the proximal end and is fused to the radius. There is no ent-epicondylar foramen.
All Primates have the power of pronation and supination of the fore-arm, by the rotation of the distal end of the radius round that of the ulna.
In Man and the Anthropoid Apes the humerus is long and straight, and has a globular head; neither of the tuberosities, nor the deltoid nor supinator ridges are much developed. The olecranon fossa is deep and there is no ent-epicondylar foramen. The radius is curved and has a narrow proximal, and expanded distal end, the ulna is straighter than the radius and has the distal end much smaller than the proximal; the olecranon is not much developed.
In the lower Primates, although the radius and ulna are always quite separate, the power of pronation and supination is not nearly so great as in the higher forms. In most of the Cebidae and Lemurs an ent-epicondylar foramen occurs.
The Manus.
The Manus is divisible into two parts, viz. the carpus or wrist, and the hand which is composed of the metacarpals and phalanges. The carpal bones are always modified from their primitive arrangement, sometimes more, sometimes less. One modification however is always found in mammals, viz. the union of carpalia, 4 and 5 to form the unciform bone. Two sesamoid bones are commonly developed, one on each side of the carpus, the pisiform or one on the ulnar side being much the larger and more constant: it has been suggested that these represent respectively vestiges of a prepollex and a post-minimus digit[172].
One or more of the five digits commonly present may be lost, and sometimes all are lost except the third. The terminal or ungual phalanges of the digits are commonly specially modified to support nails, claws, or hoofs. There are as a rule two small sesamoid bones developed on the ventral or flexor side of the metacarpo-phalangeal articulations, and sometimes similar bones occur on the dorsal or extensor side.
Monotremata. In Echidna the carpus is broad, the scaphoid and lunar are united and there is no centrale. The pisiform is large and several other sesamoid bones occur. Each of the five digits is terminated by a large ungual phalanx. In Ornithorhynchus the manus is more slender, but the general arrangement is the same as in Echidna.
Marsupialia. The carpus has no centrale and the lunar is generally small or absent. Five digits are almost always present. In Choeropus however the only two functional digits are the second and third, which have very long closely apposed metacarpals; the fourth digit is vestigial, but has the normal number of phalanges, while the first and fifth are absent. The manus in Notoryctes is extraordinarily modified, the scaphoid and all the distal carpalia are apparently fused, the first, second, and fifth digits are very small, the third and fourth, though having only one phalanx apiece, bear each an enormous claw. Lying on and obscuring the ventral surface of the manus is a large bone, probably a sesamoid.
Among the Edentata there is a great diversity in the structure of the manus, the centrale is however always wanting, and except in Manis the scaphoid and lunar are distinct. In the Sloths the manus is very long, narrow, and curved, and terminated by two or three long hooked claws, borne by the second and third, or the second, third and fourth digits. The fifth digit is absent, and the fourth is represented only by a small metacarpal. In the Anteaters the third digit is greatly developed and bears a long hooked claw. In Myrmecophaga all five digits are fairly well though irregularly developed, in Cycloturus the first, fourth, and fifth, are vestigial. In the Armadillos the manus is broad, and has strongly developed ungual phalanges. The digits, though almost always five in number, vary much in their relative arrangement. In Dasypus they are regular, but are remarkably irregular in Priodon. The pollex is absent in Glyptodonts and in Megatherium. In Megatherium the fifth digit is clawless while the second, third, and fourth bear enormous claws. In the Manidae the scaphoid and lunar are united; five digits are present, the third and fourth being very large, and all being terminated by deeply cleft ungual phalanges. In Orycteropus the pollex is absent, while the other digits are terminated by pointed ungual phalanges.