Emerson Sharon B
Department of Anatomy, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637.
J Morphol. 1976 Aug;149(4):437-458. doi: 10.1002/jmor.1051490402.
More than 95% of burrowing Anura dig hindfeet first into the soil, a pattern unique to frogs among terrestrial vertebrates. The postero-laterally placed hindlimbs and associated musculature of frogs are preadaptations for hindfeet digging. One fossorial, backwards burrower, Glyphoglossus molossus (Microhylidae), has morphological modifications of the hindlimb for positioning the spade-like metatarsal tubercle and for increasing the force of the lower leg during digging. In contrast, in the headfirst burrower Hemisus marmoratus (Ranidae) there is extensive reorganization of the pectoral-cranial morphology compared to that: of a non-burrowing confamilial species. A model links the shifts in the pectoral morphology in Hemisus marmoratus to specific action patterns of headfirst: burrowing. Finally, data on stomach contents, natural history and energy utilization of frog species are presented to demonstrate the interrelationships of distinct loco. motor patterns with specific feeding strategies.
超过95%的穴居无尾目动物先将后足挖进土壤,这种模式在陆生脊椎动物中是青蛙独有的。青蛙后外侧的后肢及相关肌肉组织是后足挖掘的预先适应特征。一种穴居的、向后挖掘的姬蛙(姬蛙科),其 hindlimb 具有形态学上的改变,以便定位铲状的跖骨结节,并在挖掘过程中增加小腿的力量。相比之下,在头先入洞的掘穴蛙(蛙科)中,与非掘穴的同科物种相比,其胸颅形态有广泛的重组。一个模型将掘穴蛙胸形态的变化与头先入洞挖掘的特定动作模式联系起来。最后,展示了有关青蛙物种胃内容物、自然史和能量利用的数据,以证明不同运动模式与特定觅食策略之间的相互关系。