Department of Biological Sciences, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL, USA.
J Anat. 2021 Mar;238(3):643-652. doi: 10.1111/joa.13329. Epub 2020 Oct 14.
Cetaceans (dolphins, whales, and porpoises) are fully aquatic mammals that are supported by water's buoyancy and swim through axial body bending. Swimming is partially mediated by variations in vertebral morphology that creates trade-offs in body flexibility and rigidity between axial regions that either enhance or reduce displacement between adjacent vertebrae. Swimming behavior is linked to foraging ecology, where deep-diving cetaceans glide a greater proportion of the time compared to their shallow-diving counterparts. In this study, we categorized 10 species of cetaceans (Families Delphinidae and Kogiidae) into functional groups determined by swimming patterns (rigid vs. flexible torso) and diving behavior (shallow vs. deep). Here, we quantify vertebral trabecular microarchitecture (a) among functional groups (rigid-torso shallow diver (RS), rigid-torso deep diver (RD), and flexible-torso deep diver (FD)), and (b) among vertebral column regions (posterior thoracic, lumbar, caudal peduncle, and fluke insertion). We microCT scanned vertebral bodies, from which 1-5 volumes of interest were selected to quantify bone volume fraction (BV/TV), specific bone surface (BS/BV), trabecular thickness (TbTh), trabecular number (TbN), trabecular separation (TbSp), and degree of anisotropy (DA). We found that BV/TV was greatest in the rigid-torso shallow-diving functional group, smallest in flexible-torso deep-diving species, and intermediate in the rigid-torso deep-diving group. DA was significantly greater in rigid-torso caudal oscillators than in their flexible-torso counterparts. We found no variation among vertebral regions for any microarchitectural variables. Despite having osteoporotic skeletons, cetacean vertebrae had greater BV/TV, TbTh, and DA than previously documented in terrestrial mammalian bone. Cetacean species are an ideal model to investigate the long-term adaptations, over an animal's lifetime and over evolutionary time, of trabecular bone in non-weight-bearing conditions.
鲸目动物(海豚、鲸鱼和鼠海豚)是完全水生的哺乳动物,它们依靠水的浮力支撑,并通过身体的轴向弯曲来游泳。游泳部分由椎体形态的变化介导,这些变化在轴区的身体灵活性和刚性之间产生了权衡,从而增加或减少相邻椎体之间的位移。游泳行为与觅食生态学有关,深潜鲸类在滑行时间上比浅潜鲸类占比更大。在这项研究中,我们根据游泳模式(刚性或柔性躯干)和潜水行为(浅潜或深潜)将 10 种鲸目动物(海豚科和小抹香鲸科)分为功能组。在此,我们量化了功能组(刚性躯干浅潜水者(RS)、刚性躯干深潜水者(RD)和柔性躯干深潜水者(FD))之间和脊柱区域(胸后段、腰椎、尾干和尾鳍插入部)之间的椎体小梁微观结构(a)。我们对椎体进行了 microCT 扫描,从中选择了 1-5 个感兴趣区域来量化骨体积分数(BV/TV)、特定骨表面(BS/BV)、小梁厚度(TbTh)、小梁数量(TbN)、小梁间距(TbSp)和各向异性度(DA)。我们发现,在刚性躯干浅潜水功能组中,BV/TV 最大,在柔性躯干深潜水物种中最小,在刚性躯干深潜水组中居中。在刚性躯干的尾干振荡器中,DA 明显大于其柔性躯干对应物。我们没有发现任何微观结构变量在椎骨区域之间存在差异。尽管鲸类骨骼患有骨质疏松症,但它们的椎体具有比以前在陆地哺乳动物骨骼中记录的更大的 BV/TV、TbTh 和 DA。鲸类是研究非承重条件下小梁骨在动物一生中以及进化过程中的长期适应性的理想模型。