Witzmann Florian, Schoch Rainer R
Museum für Naturkunde, Leibniz-Institut für Evolutions- und Biodiversitätsforschung, Invalidenstraße 43, D-10115 Berlin, Germany. florian.witzmann@ mfn-berlin.de
J Morphol. 2013 May;274(5):525-42. doi: 10.1002/jmor.20113. Epub 2012 Dec 27.
The cranial and hyobranchial muscles of the Triassic temnospondyl Gerrothorax have been reconstructed based on direct evidence (spatial limitations, ossified muscle insertion sites on skull, mandible, and hyobranchium) and on phylogenetic reasoning (with extant basal actinopterygians and caudates as bracketing taxa). The skeletal and soft-anatomical data allow the reconstruction of the feeding strike of this bottom-dwelling, aquatic temnospondyl. The orientation of the muscle scars on the postglenoid area of the mandible indicates that the depressor mandibulae was indeed used for lowering the mandible and not to raise the skull as supposed previously and implies that the skull including the mandible must have been lifted off the ground during prey capture. It can thus be assumed that Gerrothorax raised the head toward the prey with the jaws still closed. Analogous to the bracketing taxa, subsequent mouth opening was caused by action of the strong epaxial muscles (further elevation of the head) and the depressor mandibulae and rectus cervicis (lowering of the mandible). During mouth opening, the action of the rectus cervicis muscle also rotated the hyobranchial apparatus ventrally and caudally, thus expanding the buccal cavity and causing the inflow of water with the prey through the mouth opening. The strongly developed depressor mandibulae and rectus cervicis, and the well ossified, large quadrate-articular joint suggest that this action occurred rapidly and that powerful suction was generated. Also, the jaw adductors were well developed and enabled a rapid mouth closure. In contrast to extant caudate larvae and most extant actinopterygians (teleosts), no cranial kinesis was possible in the Gerrothorax skull, and therefore suction feeding was not as elaborate as in these extant forms. This reconstruction may guide future studies of feeding in extinct aquatic tetrapods with ossified hyobranchial apparatus.
基于直接证据(空间限制、颅骨、下颌骨和鳃弓上的骨化肌肉附着点)以及系统发育推理(以现存的基干辐鳍鱼类和有尾类作为界定类群),对三叠纪离片锥目两栖动物格氏螈的头部和鳃弓肌肉进行了重建。骨骼和软组织解剖数据有助于重建这种底栖水生离片锥目的捕食攻击过程。下颌骨关节后区域肌肉疤痕的方向表明,降下颌肌确实用于降低下颌骨,而不是像之前所认为的那样用于抬起颅骨,这意味着在捕获猎物时,包括下颌骨在内的颅骨必定是抬离地面的。因此可以推测,格氏螈在 jaws 仍然闭合的情况下将头部朝向猎物抬起。与界定类群类似,随后的张口动作是由强大的轴上肌(头部进一步抬起)、降下颌肌和颈直肌(下颌骨降低)的作用引起的。在张口过程中,颈直肌的作用还使鳃弓装置向腹侧和尾侧旋转,从而扩大口腔并使带有猎物的水流通过开口流入。发达的降下颌肌和颈直肌,以及骨化良好的大型方骨关节,表明这个动作发生得很快,并且产生了强大的吸力。此外,咬肌也很发达,能够实现快速闭口。与现存的有尾类幼体和大多数现存辐鳍鱼类(硬骨鱼)不同,格氏螈的头骨无法进行颅骨运动,因此吸食式摄食不像这些现存形式那样精细。这种重建可能会为未来对具有骨化鳃弓装置的已灭绝水生四足动物摄食的研究提供指导。