Cameron Joe, Shelley Sarah L, Williamson Thomas E, Brusatte Stephen L
School of GeoSciences, University of Edinburgh, Grant Institute, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.
New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Anat Rec (Hoboken). 2019 Feb;302(2):306-324. doi: 10.1002/ar.23903. Epub 2018 Nov 9.
Mammals underwent a profound diversification after the end-Cretaceous mass extinction, with placentals rapidly expanding in body size and diversity to fill new niches vacated by dinosaurs. Little is known, however, about the brains and senses of these earliest placentals, and how neurosensory features may have promoted their survival and diversification. We here use computed tomography (CT) to describe the brain, inner ear, sinuses, and endocranial nerves and vessels of Carsioptychus coarctatus, a periptychid "condylarth" that was among the first placentals to blossom during the few million years after the extinction, in the Paleocene. Carsioptychus has a generally primitive brain and inner ear that is similar to the inferred ancestral eutherian/placental condition. Notable "primitive" features include the large, anteriorly expanded, and conjoined olfactory bulbs, proportionally small neocortex, lissencephalic cerebrum, and large hindbrain compared to the cerebrum. An encephalization quotient (EQ) cannot be confidently calculated because of specimen crushing but was likely very small, and comparisons with other extinct placentals reveal that many Paleocene "archaic" mammals had EQ values below the hallmark threshold of modern placentals but within the zone of nonmammalian cynodonts, indicative of small brains and low intelligence. Carsioptychus did, however, have a "conventional" hearing range for a placental, but was not particularly agile, with semicircular canal dimensions similar to modern pigs. This information fleshes out the biology of a keystone Paleocene "archaic" placental, but more comparative work is needed to test hypotheses of how neurosensory evolution was related to the placental radiation. Anat Rec, 302:306-324, 2019. © 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
哺乳动物在白垩纪末大灭绝之后经历了一次深刻的多样化过程,胎盘类动物的体型和多样性迅速扩大,以填补恐龙腾出的新生态位。然而,对于这些最早的胎盘类动物的大脑和感官,以及神经感觉特征如何促进它们的生存和多样化,我们知之甚少。我们在这里使用计算机断层扫描(CT)来描述窄齿卡氏兽(Carsioptychus coarctatus)的大脑、内耳、鼻窦以及颅内神经和血管,窄齿卡氏兽是一种褶齿类“踝节类”动物,是在古新世灭绝后的几百万年里最早繁盛起来的胎盘类动物之一。窄齿卡氏兽总体上具有原始的大脑和内耳,类似于推断的有胎盘类祖先的状况。显著的“原始”特征包括大的、向前扩展且相连的嗅球、相对较小的新皮层、平滑脑的大脑以及与大脑相比较大的后脑。由于标本挤压,无法可靠地计算脑化指数(EQ),但可能非常小,与其他已灭绝的胎盘类动物的比较表明,许多古新世的“古老”哺乳动物的EQ值低于现代胎盘类动物的标志性阈值,但在非哺乳类犬齿兽类的范围内,这表明它们的大脑较小且智力较低。然而,窄齿卡氏兽对于胎盘类动物来说具有“常规”的听力范围,但并不特别敏捷,其半规管尺寸与现代猪相似。这些信息充实了古新世关键“古老”胎盘类动物的生物学特征,但还需要更多的比较研究来检验关于神经感觉进化与胎盘类辐射如何相关的假说。《解剖学记录》,302:306 - 324,2019年。© 2018威利期刊公司。