Fisher Rebecca E, Adrian Brent, Elrod Clay, Hicks Michelle
Department of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Arizona, College of Medicine-Phoenix in Partnership with Arizona State University, Phoenix, Arizona, USA.
J Anat. 2008 Nov;213(5):607-28. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-7580.2008.00987.x.
The red panda (Ailurus fulgens) is an endangered carnivore living in the temperate forests of the Himalayas and southern China. The phylogeny of the red panda has been the subject of much debate. Morphological and molecular studies have supported a wide range of possible relationships, including close ties to procyonids, ursids, mustelids, and mephitids. This study provides additional morphological data, including muscle maps, for Ailurus. The hindlimbs of four cadavers from the National Zoological Park were dissected. Red pandas retain a number of muscles lost in other carnivore groups, including muscles and tendons related to their robust and weight-bearing hallux. Three features, including a single-bellied m. sartorius, a proximal insertion for m. abductor digiti V, and an absent m. articularis coxae, are found in all terrestrial arctoids, including Ailurus. In addition, red pandas are similar to ursids and canids in lacking a caudal belly of m. semitendinosus, while they resemble procyonids and mustelids in the degree of fusion observed between mm. gluteus medius and piriformis. Furthermore, Ailurus and procyonids are characterized by numerous subdivisions within the adductor compartment, while red pandas and raccoons share a variable m. semimembranosus, composed of one, two, or three bellies. Lastly, a deep plantar muscle inserting onto the metatarsophalangeal joint of the hallux is described for Ailurus. This muscle has not been previously described and is given the name m. flexor hallucis profundus. Additional dissections of the forelimb and axial musculature of red pandas may shed further light on the phylogeny of this species. In addition, the muscle maps presented here offer a valuable resource for interpreting the functional anatomy of fossil ailurids.
小熊猫(Ailurus fulgens)是一种生活在喜马拉雅山脉和中国南部温带森林中的濒危食肉动物。小熊猫的系统发育一直是众多争论的焦点。形态学和分子研究支持了多种可能的关系,包括与浣熊科、熊科、鼬科和臭鼬科的密切联系。本研究为小熊猫提供了包括肌肉图谱在内的更多形态学数据。对国家动物园的四只小熊猫尸体的后肢进行了解剖。小熊猫保留了一些在其他食肉动物群体中消失的肌肉,包括与其粗壮且承重的拇趾相关的肌肉和肌腱。在包括小熊猫在内的所有陆生熊型类动物中都发现了三个特征,即单腹的缝匠肌、第五趾展肌的近端附着点以及不存在髋臼关节肌。此外,小熊猫与熊科和犬科动物相似,缺乏半腱肌的尾侧肌腹,而它们在臀中肌和梨状肌之间的融合程度上与浣熊科和鼬科动物相似。此外,小熊猫和浣熊科动物的特征是内收肌隔内有许多细分,而小熊猫和浣熊有一块由一个、两个或三个肌腹组成的可变半膜肌。最后,描述了一块插入小熊猫拇趾跖趾关节的足底深层肌肉。这块肌肉此前未被描述过,被命名为拇长屈肌。对小熊猫前肢和轴向肌肉组织的进一步解剖可能会为该物种的系统发育提供更多线索。此外,这里呈现的肌肉图谱为解释化石小熊猫科动物的功能解剖学提供了宝贵资源。