Back to Search
Start Over
Convergent evolution of a mobile bony tongue in flighted dinosaurs and pterosaurs
- Source :
- PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, Vol 13, Iss 6, p e0198078 (2018)
- Publication Year :
- 2018
- Publisher :
- Public Library of Science, 2018.
-
Abstract
- The tongue, with fleshy, muscular, and bony components, is an innovation of the earliest land-dwelling vertebrates with key functions in both feeding and respiration. Here, we bring together evidence from preserved hyoid elements from dinosaurs and outgroup archosaurs, including pterosaurs, with enhanced contrast x-ray computed tomography data from extant taxa. Midline ossification is a key component of the origin of an avian hyoid. The elaboration of the avian tongue includes the evolution of multiple novel midline hyoid bones and a larynx suspended caudal to these midline elements. While variable in dentition and skull shape, most bird-line archosaurs show a simple hyoid structure. Bony, or well-mineralized, hyoid structures in dinosaurs show limited modification in response to dietary shifts and across significant changes in body-size. In Dinosauria, at least one such narrow, midline element is variably mineralized in some basal paravian theropods. Only in derived ornithischians, pterosaurs and birds is further significant hyoid elaboration recorded. Furthermore, only in the latter two taxa does the bony tongue structure include elongation of paired hyobranchial elements that have been associated in functional studies with hyolingual mobility. Pterosaurs and enantiornithine birds achieve similar elongation and inferred mobility via elongation of ceratobranchial elements while within ornithurine birds, including living Aves, ossified and separate paired epibranchial elements (caudal to the ceratobranchials) confer an increase in hyobranchial length. The mobile tongues seen in living birds may be present in other flighted archosaurs showing a similar elongation. Shifts from hypercarnivory to more diverse feeding ecologies and diets, with the evolution of novel locomotor strategies like flight, may explain the evolution of more complex tongue function.
- Subjects :
- 0106 biological sciences
0301 basic medicine
Pterosauria
Research Facilities
Physiology
lcsh:Medicine
Museum Collections
Ossification
01 natural sciences
Dinosaurs
Extant taxon
Convergent evolution
Medicine and Health Sciences
lcsh:Science
Musculoskeletal System
Phylogeny
Archosauria
Multidisciplinary
Dentition
Fossils
Eukaryota
Prehistoric Animals
Anatomy
Biological Evolution
medicine.anatomical_structure
Vertebrates
Bone Remodeling
medicine.symptom
Larynx
Research Article
Movement
Vertebrate Paleontology
Biology
Research and Analysis Methods
010603 evolutionary biology
Birds
Throat
03 medical and health sciences
stomatognathic system
Tongue
medicine
Animals
Functional studies
Vertebrate paleontology
Paleozoology
Mouth
lcsh:R
Skull
Organisms
Hyoid Bone
Biology and Life Sciences
Paleontology
030104 developmental biology
Flight, Animal
Amniotes
Earth Sciences
lcsh:Q
Paleobiology
Physiological Processes
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
Digestive System
Neck
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 19326203
- Volume :
- 13
- Issue :
- 6
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- PLoS ONE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....6c428320050e28e11230da7d40e964bc