水鸟翅膀和后肢骨骼的形状与其运动能力有何关系?

IF 1.8 4区 医学 Q2 ANATOMY & MORPHOLOGY
Martin Segesdi, Delphine Brabant, Raphaël Cornette, Alexandra Houssaye
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引用次数: 0

摘要

水生鸟类代表了不同的生态环境和运动类型。有些鸟类变得不会飞,或者失去了有效的陆地运动能力,然而,某些物种在水中、陆地和空中都表现出色,尽管每种介质的物理特征各不相同。在这项探索性研究中,我们打算利用三维几何形态计量学定量分析水生鸟类多个肢骨的形态变化。形态变异主要由系统发育驱动,系统发育也会影响体型和运动。然而,即使考虑到系统发育,尺骨的形状(包括骨骺的比例和方向)也受体型和水生推进技术的影响。在其他骨骼中也可以观察到某些可能与功能有关的趋势,特别是在一些类群只啮合具有类似功能要求的物种时,系统发育和功能信号可能会混合在一起:企鹅表现出最独特的翼骨形态,高度适应翼的推进;先进的足推进器表现出股骨形态,降低了近端活动性,但支持稳定性;膝关节结构,如不同大小和方向的膝嵴,对于肌肉附着以及在水中和陆地上的有效运动至关重要;在水中依靠足部但保留陆地能力的类群具有使游泳和行走姿势成为可能的共同特征。与大小相关的变化区分了无翼类群的翼骨。就后肢而言,较大的尺寸与粗壮的骨骼有关,可能与陆生能力有关,但股骨的粗壮可能与脚的推进力有关。这些结果有助于我们更好地了解鸟类骨骼的适应性,并有助于推断灭绝物种的生态学。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

How does the shape of the wing and hindlimb bones of aquatic birds relate to their locomotor abilities?

How does the shape of the wing and hindlimb bones of aquatic birds relate to their locomotor abilities?

Aquatic birds represent diverse ecologies and locomotion types. Some became flightless or lost the ability for effective terrestrial locomotion, yet, certain species excel in water, on land, and in air, despite differing physical characteristics associated with each medium. In this exploratory study, we intend to quantitatively analyze the morphological variety of multiple limb bones of aquatic birds using 3D geometric morphometrics. Morphological variation is mainly driven by phylogeny, which also affects size and locomotion. However, the shape of the ulna, including the proportion and orientation of the epiphyses is influenced by size and aquatic propulsive techniques even when phylogeny is taken into consideration. Certain trends, possibly linked to functions, can be observed too in other bones, notably in cases where phylogenetic and functional signals are probably mixed when some taxa only englobe species with similar functional requirements: penguins exhibit the most distinctive wing bone morphologies, highly adapted to wing-propulsion; advanced foot-propellers exhibit femur morphology that reduces proximal mobility but supports stability; knee structures, like cnemial crests of varied sizes and orientations, are crucial for muscle attachments and efficient movement in water and on land; taxa relying on their feet in water but retaining terrestrial abilities share features enabling swimming and walking postures. Size-linked changes distinguish the wing bones of non-wing-propelled taxa. For hindlimbs, larger size relates to robust bones probably linked to terrestrial abilities, but robustness in femora can be connected to foot-propulsion. These results help us better understand birds' skeletal adaptation and can be useful inferring extinct species' ecology.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
15.00%
发文量
266
审稿时长
4 months
期刊介绍: The Anatomical Record
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