Comparative digital reconstruction of Pica pica and Struthio camelus and their cranial suture ontogenies

Author:

Plateau Olivia12ORCID,Green Todd L.3ORCID,Gignac Paul M.4ORCID,Foth Christian1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geosciences University of Fribourg Fribourg Switzerland

2. Department of Earth Sciences University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

3. Department of Anatomy New York Institute of Technology College of Osteopathic Medicine Old Westbury New York USA

4. Department of Cellular & Molecular Medicine University of Arizona College of Medicine Tucson Arizona USA

Abstract

AbstractTo date, several studies describe post‐hatching ontogenetic variation in birds; however, none of these studies document and compare ontogenetic variation of the entire skull in multiple avian species. Therefore, we studied ontogenetic skull variation of two bird species with very different ecologies, Pica pica, and Struthio camelus, using μCT based 3D reconstructions. For each specimen, we performed bone‐by‐bone segmentation in order to visualize and describe the morphological variation of each bone during ontogeny and estimated the average sutural closure of the skulls to identify different ontogenetic stages. Although bone fusion of P. pica occurs more rapidly than that of S. camelus the general sequence of bone fusion follows a similar trend from posterior to anterior, but a more detailed analysis reveals some interspecific variation in the fusion patterns. Although growth persists over a longer period in S. camelus than in P. pica and adults of the former species are significantly larger, the skull of the most mature S. camelus is still less fused than that of P. pica. Different growth and fusion patterns of the two species indicate that the interspecific ontogenetic variation could be related to heterochronic developments. Nevertheless, this hypothesis needs to be tested in a broader phylogenetic framework in order to detect the evolutionary direction of the potential heterochronic transformations.

Funder

Center for Health Sciences, Oklahoma State University

National Science Foundation

University of Arizona

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Histology,Biotechnology,Anatomy

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