The order Lamniformes contains charismatic species such as the white shark and extinct megatooth shark , and is of particular interest given their influence on marine ecosystems, and because some members exhibit regional endothermy. However, there remains significant debate surrounding the prevalence and evolutionary origin of regional endothermy in the order, and therefore the development of phenomena such as gigantism and filter-feeding in sharks generally. Here we show a basal lamniform shark, the smalltooth sand tiger shark , has centralized skeletal red muscle and a thick compact-walled ventricle; anatomical features generally consistent with regionally endothermy. This result, together with the recent discovery of probable red muscle endothermy in filter feeding basking sharks , suggests that this thermophysiology is more prevalent in the Lamniformes than previously thought, which in turn has implications for understanding the evolution of regional endothermy, gigantism, and extinction risk of warm-bodied shark species both past and present.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2023.0331 | DOI Listing |
J Anim Ecol
October 2024
Biology Department, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, USA.
The large, metabolically expensive brains of manta and devil rays (Mobula spp.) may act as a thermogenic organ representing a unique mechanistic basis for cranial endothermy among fishes that improves central nervous system function in cold waters. Whereas early hominids in hot terrestrial environments may have experienced a thermal constraint to evolving larger brain size, cetaceans and mobulids in cold marine waters may have experienced a thermal driver for enlargement of a thermogenic brain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
June 2024
Departamento de Geologia e Paleontologia, Museu Nacional, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Quinta da Boa Vista s/n, São Cristovão, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, 20940-040, Brazil.
The nasal cavity of living mammals is a unique structural complex among tetrapods, acquired along a series of major morphological transformations that occurred mainly during the Mesozoic Era, within the Synapsida clade. Particularly, non-mammaliaform cynodonts document several morphological changes in the skull, during the Triassic Period, that represent the first steps of the mammalian bauplan. We here explore the nasal cavity of five cynodont taxa, namely Thrinaxodon, Chiniquodon, Prozostrodon, Riograndia, and Brasilodon, in order to discuss the main changes within this skull region.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol
September 2024
Department of Biology, The University of Winnipeg, Winnipeg, MB R3B 2E9, Canada. Electronic address:
Regional endothermy is the ability of an animal to elevate the temperature of specific regions of the body above that of the surrounding environment and has evolved independently among several fish lineages. Sarcolipin (SLN) is a small transmembrane protein that uncouples the sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase pump (SERCA1b) resulting in futile Ca cycling and is thought to play a role in non-shivering thermogenesis (NST) in cold-challenged mammals and possibly some fishes. This study investigated the relative expression of sln and serca1 transcripts in three regionally-endothermic fishes (the skipjack, Katsuwonus pelamis, and yellowfin tuna, Thunnus albacares, both of which elevate the temperatures of their slow-twitch red skeletal muscle (RM) and extraocular muscles (EM), as well as the cranial endothermic swordfish, Xiphias gladius), and closely related ectothermic scombrids (the Eastern Pacific bonito, Sarda chiliensis, and Pacific chub mackerel, Scomber japonicus).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Biol
June 2024
Centro de Investigación Mariña, Departamento de Ecoloxía e Bioloxía Animal, Universidade de Vigo, Campus Lagoas-Marcosende, 36310 Vigo, Spain.
A fundamental question in dinosaur evolution is how they adapted to long-term climatic shifts during the Mesozoic and when they developed environmentally independent, avian-style acclimatization, becoming endothermic. The ability of warm-blooded dinosaurs to flourish in harsher environments, including cold, high-latitude regions, raises intriguing questions about the origins of key innovations shared with modern birds, indicating that the development of homeothermy (keeping constant body temperature) and endothermy (generating body heat) played a crucial role in their ecological diversification. Despite substantial evidence across scientific disciplines (anatomy, reproduction, energetics, biomechanics, osteohistology, palaeobiogeography, geochemistry, and soft tissues), a consensus on dinosaur thermophysiology remains elusive.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Insect Physiol
March 2024
Departamento de Biogeografía y Cambio Global, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales-CSIC, Spain. Electronic address:
While there are numerous examples of thermogenesis processes in poikilothermic insects that maintain a stable temperature for a certain time and in certain parts of the body, there is a lack of information on ectothermic insect species capable of remaining active under "cold" conditions that would be challenging for other species. Such a thermal strategy would imply the existence of a metabolism that can operate at different temperatures without the need to increase body temperature when experiencing cold environmental conditions. This "hotter-is-not-better" thermal strategy is considered ancestral and conjectured to be linked to the origin and evolution of endothermy.
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