Conserved bone microstructure in the shells of long-necked and short-necked chelid turtles (Testudinata, Pleurodira)
Extant and fossil chelids are restricted to South America and Australasia. Based on morphological data, long-necked and short-necked chelids are hypothesised to form natural groups respectively, whereas molecular and serological data indicate South American and Australasian chelids are monophyletic,...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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Copernicus Publications
2009-02-01
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Series: | Fossil Record |
Online Access: | http://www.foss-rec.net/12/47/2009/fr-12-47-2009.pdf |
Summary: | Extant and fossil chelids are restricted to South America and Australasia. Based on morphological data, long-necked and short-necked chelids are hypothesised to form natural groups respectively, whereas molecular and serological data indicate South American and Australasian chelids are monophyletic, regardless of neck-length. Here I provide shell bone histological and microanatomical data and character mapping of seven chelid taxa and the Late Jurassic stem-pleurodiran <i>Platychelys oberndorferi</i> Wagner, 1853 to test both competing hypotheses. The chelid shells show conserved bone microstructures, many of which are plesiomorphic for all turtles. Part of the variation among chelid shell microstructures could be attributed to functional aspects associated with the ecology of the taxa, i.e. adaptation to an aquatic lifestyle. The character mapping further indicates that the hypothesis of clades based on neck length is supported by two synapomorphies (i.e., parallel-fibred bone grading into lamellar bone in internal cortex and vascularisation of internal cortex) and one less tree step (16 instead of 17) in contrast to the molecular-based separation based on geographic distribution.
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doi:<a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mmng.200800009" target="_blank">10.1002/mmng.200800009</a> |
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ISSN: | 2193-0066 2193-0074 |