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[dinosaur] Squamate determinate growth + turtle shell ecomorphology (free pdfs)



Ben Creisler
bcreisler@gmail.com

Some recent non-dino reptile papers:

NOTE that Royal Society publications have free pdfs for now (temporary)

Free pdf:

Petra FrÃdlovÃ, Jana MrzÃlkovÃ, Martin Åeremeta, Jan KÅemen, Jan DudÃk, Jan ÅemliÄka, Bernd Minnich, Kristina KverkovÃ, Pavel NÄmec, Petr Zach and Daniel Frynta (2020)
Determinate growth is predominant and likely ancestral in squamate reptiles.
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 287(1941): 20202737
doi: https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2020.2737
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rspb.2020.2737

Free pdf:
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rspb.2020.2737



Body growth is typically thought to be indeterminate in ectothermic vertebrates. Indeed, until recently, this growth pattern was considered to be ubiquitous in ectotherms. Our recent observations of a complete growth plate cartilage (GPC) resorption, a reliable indicator of arrested skeletal growth, in many species of lizards clearly reject the ubiquity of indeterminate growth in reptiles and raise the question about the ancestral state of the growth pattern. Using X-ray micro-computed tomography (ÂCT), here we examined GPCs of long bones in three basally branching clades of squamate reptiles, namely in Gekkota, Scincoidea and Lacertoidea. A complete loss of GPC, indicating skeletal growth arrest, was the predominant finding. Using a dataset of 164 species representing all major clades of lizards and the tuataras, we traced the evolution of determinate growth on the phylogenetic tree of Lepidosauria. The reconstruction of character states suggests that determinate growth is ancestral for the squamate reptiles (Squamata) and remains common in the majority of lizard lineages, while extended (potentially indeterminate) adult growth evolved several times within squamates. Although traditionally associated with endotherms, determinate growth is coupled with ectothermy in this lineage. These findings combined with existing literature suggest that determinate growth predominates in both extant and extinct amniotes.

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Free pdf:

Laura Dziomber, Walter G. Joyce & Christian Foth (2020)
The ecomorphology of the shell of extant turtles and its applications for fossil turtles.
PeerJ 8:e10490
doi: https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.10490
https://peerj.com/articles/10490/


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Turtles are a successful clade of reptiles that originated in the Late Triassic. The group adapted during its evolution to different types of environments, ranging from dry land to ponds, rivers, and the open ocean, and survived all Mesozoic and Cenozoic extinction events. The body of turtles is characterized by a shell, which has been hypothesized to have several biological roles, like protection, thermal and pH regulation, but also to be adapted in its shape to the ecology of the animal. However, only few studies have investigated the relationships between shell shape and ecology in a global context or clarified if shape can be used to diagnose habitat preferences in fossil representatives. Here, we assembled a three-dimensional dataset of 69 extant turtles and three fossils, in particular, the Late Triassic Proganochelys quenstedtii and Proterochersis robusta and the Late Jurassic Plesiochelys bigleri to test explicitly for a relationship between shell shape and ecology. 3D models were obtained using surface scanning and photogrammetry. The general shape of the shells was captured using geometric morphometrics. The habitat ecology of extant turtles was classified using the webbing of their forelimbs as a proxy. Principal component analysis (PCA) highlights much overlap between habitat groups. Discriminant analyses suggests significant differences between extant terrestrial turtles, extant fully aquatic (i.e., marine and riverine) turtles, and an unspecialized assemblage that includes extant turtles from all habitats, mostly freshwater aquatic forms. The paleoecology of the three fossil species cannot be determined with confidence, as all three fall within the unspecialized category, even if Plesiochelys bigleri plots closer to fully aquatic turtles, while the two Triassic species group closer to extant terrestrial forms. Although the shape of the shell of turtles indeed contains an ecological signal, it is overall too weak to uncover using shell shape in paleoecological studies, at least with the methods we selected.



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