KMS Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology
Skull sinuses precluded extinct crocodile relatives from cetacean-style deep diving as they transitioned from land to sea | |
Young, Mark T.1,2,3; Schwab, Julia A.1,4; Dufeau, David5; Racicot, Rachel A.6; Cowgill, Thomas1; Bowman, Charlotte I. W.1; Witmer, Lawrence M.7; Herrera, Yanina8; Higgins, Robert1; Zanno, Lindsay9,10; Xing, Xu11,12; Clark, James13; Brusatte, Stephen L.1,14 | |
2024-10-30 | |
发表期刊 | ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE
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ISSN | 2054-5703 |
卷号 | 11期号:10页码:20 |
通讯作者 | Young, Mark T.(marktyoung1984@gmail.com) |
摘要 | During major evolutionary transitions, groups develop radically new body plans and radiate into new habitats. A classic example is cetaceans which evolved from terrestrial ancestors to become pelagic swimmers. In doing so, they altered their air-filled sinuses, transitioning some of these spaces to allow for fluctuations in air capacity and storage via soft tissue borders. Other tetrapods independently underwent land-to-sea transitions, but it is unclear if they similarly changed their sinuses. We use computed tomography to study sinus changes in thalattosuchian crocodylomorphs that transformed from land-bound ancestors to become the only known aquatic swimming archosaurs. We find that thalattosuchian braincase sinuses reduced over their transition, similar to cetaceans, but their snout sinuses counterintuitively expanded, distinct from cetaceans, and that both trends were underpinned by high evolutionary rates. We hypothesize that aquatic thalattosuchians were ill suited to deep diving by their snout sinuses, which seem to have remained large to help drain their unusual salt glands. Thus, although convergent in general terms, thalattosuchians and cetaceans were subject to different constraints that shaped their transitions to water. Thalattosuchians attained a stage similar to less pelagic transitional forms in the cetacean lineage (late protocetid-basilosaurid) but did not become further specialized for ocean life. |
关键词 | Mesozoic multivariate analyses morphospace convergence sinuses macroevolution marine tetrapods |
DOI | 10.1098/rsos.241272 |
关键词[WOS] | CRICOSAURUS-ARAUCANENSIS ; GEOSAURUS-ARAUCANENSIS ; PHYLOGENETIC POSITION ; DIRECTIONAL HEARING ; THALATTOSUCHIA ; EVOLUTION ; MORPHOLOGY ; ANATOMY ; CROCODYLOMORPHA ; CAVITIES |
收录类别 | SCI |
语种 | 英语 |
资助项目 | Leverhulme Trust Research Project grant[RPG-2017-167] ; United States National Science Foundation[IOB-0517257] ; United States National Science Foundation[IOS-1050154] ; United States National Science Foundation[IOS-1456503] ; Swedish Research Council[2021-02973] ; ANPCyT[PICT 2020-2067] ; CONICET[PIP 2844] ; Humboldt Research Fellowship from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation ; National Natural Science Foundation of China[42288201.] ; Life Sciences, University of Southampton ; Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellowship[ECF-2023-365] |
项目资助者 | Leverhulme Trust Research Project grant ; United States National Science Foundation ; Swedish Research Council ; ANPCyT ; CONICET ; Humboldt Research Fellowship from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation ; National Natural Science Foundation of China ; Life Sciences, University of Southampton ; Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellowship |
WOS研究方向 | Science & Technology - Other Topics |
WOS类目 | Multidisciplinary Sciences |
WOS记录号 | WOS:001344865700001 |
出版者 | ROYAL SOC |
引用统计 | |
文献类型 | 期刊论文 |
条目标识符 | http://119.78.100.205/handle/311034/24029 |
专题 | 中国科学院古脊椎动物与古人类研究所 |
通讯作者 | Young, Mark T. |
作者单位 | 1.Univ Edinburgh, Grant Inst, Sch Geosci, Edinburgh EH9 3FE, Scotland 2.LWL Museum Nat Kunde, Sentruper Str 285, D-48161 Munster, Germany 3.Univ Southampton, Fac Environm & Life Sci, Sch Biol Sci, Southampton, England 4.Univ Manchester, Dept Earth & Environm Sci, Williamson Bldg,Oxford Rd, Oxford M13 9PL, England 5.Marian Univ, Coll Osteopath Med, Indianapolis, IN USA 6.Senckenberg Res Inst & Nat Hist Museum, Dept Messel Res & Mammal, Senckenberganlage 25, D-60325 Frankfurt, Germany 7.Ohio Univ, Heritage Coll Osteopath Med, Dept Biomed Sci, Athens, OH USA 8.UNLP, Fac Ciencias Nat & Museo, Unidad Invest Anexo Museo, CONICET,Div Paleontol Vertebrados, La Plata, Argentina 9.North Carolina Museum Nat Sci, Paleontol, Raleigh, NC USA 10.North Carolina State Univ, Dept Biol Sci, 100 Brooks Ave, Raleigh, NC 27607 USA 11.Yunnan Univ, Ctr Vertebrate Evolutionary Biol, Kunming 650031, Peoples R China 12.Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Vertebrate Paleontol & Paleoanthropol, Beijing 100044, Peoples R China 13.George Washington Univ, Dept Biol Sci, Washington, DC USA 14.Natl Museums Scotland, Dept Nat Sci, Chambers St, Edinburgh EH1 1JF, Scotland |
推荐引用方式 GB/T 7714 | Young, Mark T.,Schwab, Julia A.,Dufeau, David,et al. Skull sinuses precluded extinct crocodile relatives from cetacean-style deep diving as they transitioned from land to sea[J]. ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE,2024,11(10):20. |
APA | Young, Mark T..,Schwab, Julia A..,Dufeau, David.,Racicot, Rachel A..,Cowgill, Thomas.,...&Brusatte, Stephen L..(2024).Skull sinuses precluded extinct crocodile relatives from cetacean-style deep diving as they transitioned from land to sea.ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE,11(10),20. |
MLA | Young, Mark T.,et al."Skull sinuses precluded extinct crocodile relatives from cetacean-style deep diving as they transitioned from land to sea".ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE 11.10(2024):20. |
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