Osteological and histological comparison of the development of the interphalangeal intercalary skeletal element between hyloid and ranoid anurans

Author:

Nakanishi Kensuke1,Hasegawa Nao1,Takeo Koichi1,Nakajima Keisuke23ORCID,Furuno Nobuaki23,Tazawa Ichiro23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Kindai University Hiroshima High School Higashihiroshima Japan

2. Hiroshima University Amphibian Research Center Higashihiroshima Japan

3. Program of Basic Biology, Graduate School of Integrated Sciences for Life Hiroshima University Higashihiroshima Japan

Abstract

AbstractSome frog species have a unique skeletal element, referred to as the intercalary element (IE), in the joints between the terminal and subterminal phalanges of all digits. IEs are composed of cartilage or connective tissue and have a markedly differ shape than the phalanges. IEs are highly related to the arboreal lifestyle and toe pads. The IE is found only in neobatrachian frogs among anurans, suggesting that it is a novelty of Neobatrachia. IEs are widely distributed among multiple neobatrachian lineages and are found in the suborders Hyloides and Ranoides (the two major clades in Neobatrachia). However, it is unclear whether the IEs found in multiple linages resulted from convergent evolution. Therefore, in this study, we aimed to examine how similar or different the developmental trajectories of the IEs are between Hyloides and Ranoides. To that end, we compared the osteological and histological developmental processes of the IEs of the hyloid frog Dryophytes japonicus and the ranoid frog Zhangixalus schlegelii. Both species shared the same IE‐initiation site and level of tissue differentiation around the IE when it began to form in tadpoles, although the IE developments initiated at different stages which were determined by external criteria. These results suggest that similar mechanisms drive IE formation in the digits of both species, supporting the hypothesis that the IEs did not evolve convergently.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology

Reference24 articles.

1. AmphibiaWeb. (2022).https://amphibiaweb.orgUniversity of California Berkeley CA USA. Accessed 12 Mar 2022.

2. Adaptation and Evolution in the Hand Muscles of Australo-Papuan Hylid Frogs (Anura: Hylidae: Pelodryadinae)

3. Toe pad morphology and mechanisms of sticking in frogs

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