Submitted by violetmammal4694 t3_1231x4h in askscience
What I mean is most bipedal animals (such as kangaroo rats and mice, ground pangolins, and macropods, and even extinct ones such as tyrannosaurs) have at least a somewhat hunched back.
The only nonhuman erect bipedal animals I know are penguins.
jlpulice t1_jdtvhaa wrote
Because the trade off is extremely rare. Humans became bipedal to travel great distances, other animals either can do that on four legs, or were evolved to live in trees. Our evolutionary history is quite unique, we are descended from climbers/tree dwellers, and then went back to land.