From fish to modern humans - comparative anatomy, homologies and evolution of the pectoral and forelimb musculature

被引:67
作者
Diogo, R. [1 ]
Abdala, V. [2 ]
Aziz, M. A. [3 ]
Lonergan, N. [1 ]
Wood, B. A. [1 ]
机构
[1] George Washington Univ, Dept Anthropol, Ctr Adv Study Hominid Paleobiol, Washington, DC 20052 USA
[2] Consejo Nacl Invest Cient & Tecn, Fundac Miguel Lillo, Inst Herpetol, UNT, San Miguel De Tucuman, Argentina
[3] Howard Univ, Dept Anat, Washington, DC 20059 USA
关键词
anatomy; bony fish; evolution; homologies; mammals; muscles; tetrapods; Sarcopterygii; SHOULDER ARCHITECTURE; INTRINSIC MUSCLES; LIMB MUSCULATURE; MORPHOGENESIS; MYOLOGY; TETRAPODS; TUPAIIDS; MAMMALIA; LIZARDS; FOREARM;
D O I
10.1111/j.1469-7580.2009.01067.x
中图分类号
R602 [外科病理学、解剖学]; R32 [人体形态学];
学科分类号
100101 ;
摘要
In a recent study Diogo & Abdala [(2007) J Morphol 268, 504-517] reported the results of the first part of a research project on the comparative anatomy, homologies and evolution of the pectoral muscles of osteichthyans (bony fish and tetrapods). That report mainly focused on actinopterygian fish but also compared these fish with certain non-mammalian sarcopterygians. This study, which reports the second part of the research project, focuses mainly on sarcopterygians and particularly on how the pectoral and forelimb muscles have evolved during the transitions from sarcopterygian fish and non-mammalian tetrapods to monotreme and therian mammals and humans. The data obtained by our own dissections of all the pectoral and forelimb muscles of representative members of groups as diverse as sarcopterygian fish, amphibians, reptiles, monotremes and therian mammals such as rodents, tree-shrews, colugos and primates, including humans, are compared with the information available in the literature. Our observations and comparisons clearly stress that, with regard to the number of pectoral and forelimb muscles, the most striking transition within sarcopterygian evolutionary history was that leading to the origin of tetrapods. Whereas extant sarcopterygian fish have an abductor and adductor of the fin and a largely undifferentiated hypaxial and epaxial musculature, extant salamanders such as Ambystoma have more than 40 pectoral and forelimb muscles. There is no clear increase in the number of pectoral and forelimb muscles within the evolutionary transition that led to the origin of mammals and surely not to that leading to the origin of primates and humans.
引用
收藏
页码:694 / 716
页数:23
相关论文
共 100 条
[71]  
Parsons F G, 1898, J Anat Physiol, V32, P721
[72]  
Peterka H.E., 1936, T KANSAS ACAD SCI, V39, P313, DOI DOI 10.2307/3625186
[73]  
POUGH F H., 1996, Vertebrate life, V5A
[74]  
Ribbing L., 1907, Zoologische Jahrbuecher Jena Abteilungen fur Anatomie, V23
[75]   Comparative study on the forefoot and hindfoot intrinsic muscles of some cavioidea rodents (Mammalia, Rodentia) [J].
Rocha-Barbosa, Oscar ;
Loguercio, Mariana F. C. ;
Renous, Sabine ;
Gasc, Jean-Pierre .
ZOOLOGY, 2007, 110 (01) :58-65
[76]   Pectoral limb musculature and shoulder-girdle structure in fish and tetrapods [J].
Romer, AS .
ANATOMICAL RECORD, 1924, 27 (02) :119-143
[77]   The development of tetrapod limb musculature - The shoulder region of Lacerta [J].
Romer, AS .
JOURNAL OF MORPHOLOGY, 1944, 74 (01) :1-41
[78]  
Romer AS, 1922, B AM MUS NAT HIST, V56, P517
[79]   New views on tree shrews: The role of tupaiids in primate supraordinal relationships [J].
Sargis, EJ .
EVOLUTIONARY ANTHROPOLOGY, 2004, 13 (02) :56-66
[80]   Functional morphology of the forelimb of tupaiids (Mammalia, Scandentia) and its phylogenetic implications [J].
Sargis, EJ .
JOURNAL OF MORPHOLOGY, 2002, 253 (01) :10-42