AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the anatomical and scaling relationships of the eyeball and bony orbit in crocodylians, revealing important variations between species.
  • Results show that the eyeballs of Crocodylus niloticus are larger relative to their orbit size compared to Alligator mississippiensis, indicating a unique negatively allometric relationship.
  • New insights into the anatomy of the extraocular muscles were discovered, particularly highlighting the complexity of the M. rectus lateralis muscle in crocodylians, which may provide important evolutionary clues for understanding visual systems in extinct relatives.

Article Abstract

Although the visual system of crocodylians has attracted interest regarding optical parameters and retinal anatomy, fundamental questions remain about the allometry of the eyeball and whether such scaling is the same across all crown groups of crocodylians. In addition, anatomy and identities of adnexal soft tissues that interact with the visual system are not well understood in many cases. We used contrast-enhancing iodine stain and high-resolution micro-computed tomography to assess the anatomy of orbital soft tissues, including extraocular muscles and glands, in crocodylians. We also used regression analysis to estimate the allometric relationship between the bony orbit and eyeball across Alligator mississippiensis and Crocodylus niloticus for the first time. Results revealed tight, negatively allometric relationships between the bony orbit and eyeball. Notably, the eyes of C. niloticus were larger for a given orbit size than the eyes of A. mississippiensis, although the slope of the relationship was no different between these two crown crocodylian groups. Among the findings from our anatomical study, new details were uncovered about the homologies of muscles of the abducens complex. In particular, M. rectus lateralis of crocodylians is revealed to have a more complex form than previously appreciated, being adhered to the tendon of the nictitating membrane, which may be apomorphic for Crocodylia. Our calculation of the orbit-eyeball allometric relationship and study of the adnexal soft tissues of the crocodylian visual system, in combination with previous work by other teams in other crown saurian clades, is a critical, formerly missing, piece in the Extant Phylogenetic Bracket for restoring the visual apparatus of extinct crocodyliforms and other archosauriform groups.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ar.25133DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

soft tissues
16
visual system
12
orbital soft
8
adnexal soft
8
allometric relationship
8
bony orbit
8
orbit eyeball
8
tissues
4
tissues bones
4
bones allometry
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!