Evolution of Sirenian Pachyosteosclerosis, a Model-case for the Study of Bone Structure in Aquatic Tetrapods.

Autor: De Buffrénil, Vivian, Canoville, Aurore, D'Anastasio, Ruggero, Domning, Daryl P.
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Zdroj: Journal of Mammalian Evolution; Jun2010, Vol. 17 Issue 2, p101-120, 20p, 3 Black and White Photographs, 3 Diagrams, 3 Charts, 2 Graphs
Abstrakt: Osteosclerosis, or inner bone compaction, and pachyostosis, or outer hyperplasy of bone cortices (swollen bones), are typical features of tetrapods secondarily adapted to life in water. These peculiarities are spectacularly exemplified by the ribs of extant and extinct Sirenia. Sea cows are thus the best model for studying this kind of bone structural specializations. In order to document how these features differentiated during sirenian evolution, the ribs of 15 species, from the most basal form ( Pezosiren portelli) up to extant taxa, were studied, and compared to those of other mammalian species from both morphometric and histological points of view. Pachyostosis was the first of these two specializations to occur, by the middle of the Eocene, and is a basal feature of the Sirenia. However, it subsequently regressed in some taxa that do not exhibit hyperplasic rib cortices. Osteosclerosis was only incipient in P. portelli. Its full development occurred later, by the end of the Eocene. These two structural specializations of bone are variably pronounced in extinct and extant sirenians, and relatively independent from each other, although frequently associated. They are possibly due to similar heterochronic mechanisms bearing on the timing of osteoblast activity. These results are discussed with respect to the functional constraints of locomotion in water. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index