Homology of the enigmatic nuchal bone reveals novel reorganization of the shoulder girdle in the evolution of the turtle shell.

Evol Dev

Department of Geology and Geophysics, Yale University, New Haven, CT, 06511, USA; Division of Vertebrate Paleontology, Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History, New Haven, CT, 06511, USA; Department of Vertebrate Zoology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, 20560, USA.

Published: December 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • The turtle shell is a significant adaptation of the ancestral tetrapod body plan, with ongoing debate around the evolutionary origin of its 50 bones, particularly the dorsal median nuchal bone.
  • The proposed hypothesis suggests that the nuchal bone originates from paired cleithra-dorsal elements of the ancestral tetrapod's pectoral girdle, similar to structures found in frogs today.
  • This theory is backed by evidence of the nuchal's development from mesenchymal condensations, its role in muscle attachment, and its anatomical connections to the shoulder girdle, indicating a major structural reorganization in turtle evolution.

Article Abstract

The turtle shell represents a unique modification of the ancestral tetrapod body plan. The homologies of its approximately 50 bones have been the subject of debate for more than 200 years. Although most of those homologies are now firmly established, the evolutionary origin of the dorsal median nuchal bone of the carapace remains unresolved. We propose a novel hypothesis in which the nuchal is derived from the paired, laterally positioned cleithra-dorsal elements of the ancestral tetrapod pectoral girdle that are otherwise retained among extant tetrapods only in frogs. This hypothesis is supported by origin of the nuchal as paired, mesenchymal condensations likely derived from the neural crest followed by a unique two-stage pattern of ossification. Further support is drawn from the establishment of the nuchal as part of a highly conserved "muscle scaffold" wherein the cleithrum (and its evolutionary derivatives) serves as the origin of the Musculus trapezius. Identification of the nuchal as fused cleithra is congruent with its general spatial relationships to other elements of the shoulder girdle in the adult morphology of extant turtles, and it is further supported by patterns of connectivity and transformations documented by critical fossils from the turtle stem group. The cleithral derivation of the nuchal implies an anatomical reorganization of the pectoral girdle in which the dermal portion of the girdle was transformed from a continuous lateral-ventral arc into separate dorsal and ventral components. This transformation involved the reduction and eventual loss of the scapular rami of the clavicles along with the dorsal and superficial migration of the cleithra, which then fused with one another and became incorporated into the carapace.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ede.12041DOI Listing

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