Cell and Developmental Biology, University College London, London, WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom.
Department of Earth Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, OX1 3AN, United Kingdom.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2022 Jul 26;119(30):e2114100119. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2114100119. Epub 2022 Jul 11.
Salamanders are an important group of living amphibians and model organisms for understanding locomotion, development, regeneration, feeding, and toxicity in tetrapods. However, their origin and early radiation remain poorly understood, with early fossil stem-salamanders so far represented by larval or incompletely known taxa. This poor record also limits understanding of the origin of Lissamphibia (i.e., frogs, salamanders, and caecilians). We report fossils from the Middle Jurassic of Scotland representing almost the entire skeleton of the enigmatic stem-salamander . We use computed tomography to visualize high-resolution three-dimensional anatomy, describing morphologies that were poorly characterized in early salamanders, including the braincase, scapulocoracoid, and lower jaw. We use these data in the context of a phylogenetic analysis intended to resolve the relationships of early and stem-salamanders, including representation of important outgroups alongside data from high-resolution imaging of extant species. is united with , , and others from the Middle Jurassic-Lower Cretaceous of Asia, providing evidence for an early radiation of robustly built neotenous stem-salamanders. These taxa display morphological specializations similar to the extant cryptobranchid "giant" salamanders. Our analysis also demonstrates stem-group affinities for a larger sample of Jurassic species than previously recognized, highlighting an unappreciated diversity of stem-salamanders and cautioning against the use of single species (e.g., Karaurus) as exemplars for stem-salamander anatomy. These phylogenetic findings, combined with knowledge of the near-complete skeletal anatomy of advance our understanding of evolutionary changes on the salamander stem-lineage and provide important data on early salamanders and the origins of Batrachia and Lissamphibia.
蝾螈是一类重要的活两栖动物,也是研究四足动物运动、发育、再生、摄食和毒性的模式生物。然而,它们的起源和早期辐射仍然知之甚少,早期的化石有尾类蝾螈迄今为止仅以幼虫或不完全了解的分类群为代表。这种较差的记录也限制了对两栖动物(即青蛙、蝾螈和蚓螈)起源的理解。我们报告了来自苏格兰中侏罗世的化石,这些化石代表了神秘的有尾类蝾螈的几乎完整骨架。我们使用计算机断层扫描来可视化高分辨率的三维解剖结构,描述了早期蝾螈中特征描述较差的形态,包括脑颅、肩带和下颌。我们将这些数据用于系统发育分析中,旨在解决早期和有尾类蝾螈的关系,包括与高分辨率成像的现生物种数据一起代表重要的外群。将与来自亚洲中侏罗世-下白垩世的 和其他物种联合起来,为具有强壮的幼态延续特征的有尾类蝾螈的早期辐射提供了证据。这些分类群显示出与现存隐鳃鲵科“巨型”蝾螈相似的形态特化。我们的分析还表明,比以前认识到的更多的侏罗纪物种具有支系关系,这突出了支系蝾螈的未被充分认识的多样性,并警告不要将单个物种(例如,卡拉乌尔蝾螈)用作支系蝾螈解剖结构的范例。这些系统发育研究结果,结合对 近乎完整的骨骼解剖结构的了解,推进了我们对蝾螈支系进化变化的理解,并为早期蝾螈以及 Batrachia 和 Lissamphibia 的起源提供了重要数据。