Ontogenetic and interelemental study of appendicular bones of Caiman latirostris Daudin, 1802 sheds light on osteohistological variability in crocodylians

Author:

Pereyra María Eugenia12ORCID,Bona Paula2,Siroski Pablo3,Chinsamy Anusuya1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences University of Cape Town Cape Town South Africa

2. División Paleontología Vertebrados Anexo Laboratorios,Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo, CONICET La Plata Buenos Aires Argentina

3. Laboratorio de Ecología Molecular Aplicada, Instituto de Ciencias Veterinarias del Litoral (ICiVet Litoral) Universidad Nacional del Litoral–CONICET Esperanza Argentina

Abstract

AbstractThe osteohistology of vertebrates provides a reliable source to deduce biological information, particularly regarding growth and development. Although osteohistological studies in Neosuchia (Crocodyliformes, Mesoeucrocodylia) are relatively numerous, the number of species studied within the group is still small. Extant crocodilians are known to exhibit intraspecific variability linked to environmental conditions, habitat, feeding, and other intrapopulation factors. Here, we analyzed the osteohistology of the living South American Caiman latirostris throughout posthatching ontogeny. The histology of several appendicular bones of 13 different‐sized captive and wild individuals were examined. Although some thin sections revealed the classic lamellar, parallel‐fibered, or woven bone matrices, others showed a variation and a mix between the organization of the bone tissue. These histological differences are likely related to variability in the growth dynamics of caimans. In some bones of the juveniles studied, remnants of embryonic bone were observed. Osteohistological variation related to prevailing environmental conditions is documented. Furthermore, our results show ontogenetic variation in the type of bone tissues deposited throughout the development of C. latirostris. This study offers a broad framework for life history interpretations for C. latirostris and provides insight into the evolutionary history and ontogenetic growth of extinct crocodylian lineages.

Funder

National Research Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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