1. The integumental appendages of the turtle shell: an evo-devo perspective.
- Author
-
Moustakas-Verho JE and Cherepanov GO
- Subjects
- Animal Shells embryology, Animals, Epidermis anatomy & histology, Epidermis embryology, Paleontology, Turtles embryology, Animal Shells anatomy & histology, Biological Evolution, Turtles anatomy & histology
- Abstract
The turtle shell is composed of dorsal armor (carapace) and ventral armor (plastron) covered by a keratinized epithelium. There are two epithelial appendages of the turtle shell: scutes (large epidermal shields separated by furrows and forming a unique mosaic) and tubercles (numerous small epidermal bumps located on the carapaces of some species). In our perspective, we take a synthetic, comparative approach to consider the homology and evolution of these integumental appendages. Scutes have been more intensively studied, as they are autapomorphic for turtles and can be diagnostic taxonomically. Their pattern of tessellation is stable phylogenetically, but labile in the individual. We discuss the history of developmental investigations of these structures and hypotheses of evolutionary and anomalous variation. In our estimation, the scutes of the turtle shell are an evolutionary novelty, whereas the tubercles found on the shells of some turtles are homologous to reptilian scales., (© 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF