Suppr超能文献

鲸类手部多指畸形与指骨减少的演化

Evolution of hyperphalangy and digit reduction in the cetacean manus.

作者信息

Cooper Lisa Noelle, Berta Annalisa, Dawson Susan D, Reidenberg Joy S

机构信息

Anatomy Department, Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine, Rootstown, Ohio 44272-0095, USA.

出版信息

Anat Rec (Hoboken). 2007 Jun;290(6):654-72. doi: 10.1002/ar.20532.

Abstract

Cetaceans (whales, dolphins, and porpoises) have a soft tissue flipper that encases most of the forelimb, and elongated digits with an increased number of phalanges (hyperphalangy). In addition, some cetaceans exhibit a reduction in digit number. Although toothed cetaceans (odontocetes) are pentadactylous, most baleen whales (mysticetes) are tetradactylous and also lack a metacarpal. This study conducts a survey of cetacean metacarpal and phalangeal morphologies, traces the evolution of hyperphalangy in a phylogenetic context, optimizes characters onto previously published cetacean phylogenies, and tests various digit loss hypotheses. Dissections were performed on 16 cetacean flippers representing 10 species (8 mysticetes, 2 odontocetes). Phalangeal count data were derived from forelimb radiographs (36 odontocetes, 5 mysticetes), osteological specimens of articulated forelimbs (8 mysticetes), and were supplemented with published counts. Modal phalangeal counts were coded as ordered and unpolarized characters and optimized onto two known cetacean phylogenies. Results indicate that digital ray I is reduced in many cetaceans (except Globicephala) and all elements of digital ray I were lost in tetradactylous mysticetes. Fossil evidence indicates this ray may have been lost approximately 14 Ma. Most odontocetes also reduce the number of phalangeal elements in digit V, while mysticetes typically retain the plesiomorphic condition of three phalanges. Results from modal phalangeal counts show the greatest degree of hyperphalangy in digits II and III in odontocetes and digits III and IV in mysticetes. Fossil evidence indicates cetacean hyperphalangy evolved by at least 7-8 Ma. Digit loss and digit positioning may underlie disparate flipper shapes, with narrow, elongate flippers facilitating fast swimming and broad flippers aiding slow turns. Hyperphalangy may help distribute leading edge forces, and multiple interphalangeal joints may smooth leading edge flipper contour.

摘要

鲸类动物(鲸鱼、海豚和鼠海豚)有一个包裹大部分前肢的软组织鳍状肢,以及指骨数量增加的细长指骨(多指症)。此外,一些鲸类动物的指骨数量有所减少。虽然齿鲸(齿鲸亚目)是五指的,但大多数须鲸(须鲸亚目)是四指的,并且也没有掌骨。本研究对鲸类动物的掌骨和指骨形态进行了调查,在系统发育背景下追溯了多指症的进化过程,将特征优化到先前发表的鲸类动物系统发育树上,并检验了各种指骨丢失假说。对代表10个物种(8种须鲸、2种齿鲸)的16个鲸类动物鳍状肢进行了解剖。指骨计数数据来自前肢X光片(36种齿鲸、5种须鲸)、关节前肢的骨骼标本(8种须鲸),并补充了已发表的计数数据。将模式指骨计数编码为有序和非极化特征,并优化到两个已知的鲸类动物系统发育树上。结果表明,许多鲸类动物(除领航鲸外)的第一指射线减少,四指须鲸的第一指射线所有元素均丢失。化石证据表明这条射线可能在大约1400万年前就已丢失。大多数齿鲸也减少了第五指的指骨元素数量,而须鲸通常保留了三个指骨的原始状态。模式指骨计数结果显示,齿鲸的第二和第三指以及须鲸的第三和第四指的多指症程度最高。化石证据表明鲸类动物的多指症至少在700 - 800万年前就已进化。指骨丢失和指骨位置可能是不同鳍状肢形状的基础,狭窄、细长的鳍状肢有助于快速游泳,宽阔的鳍状肢有助于缓慢转向。多指症可能有助于分散前缘力,多个指间关节可能使前缘鳍状肢轮廓更平滑。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验