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You are here: Home / Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2022 / Regional differences in vertebral shape along the axial skeleton in caecilians (Amphibia: Gymnophiona)

Aurélien Lowie, Barbara De Kegel, Mark Wilkinson, John Measey, James O'Reilly, Nathan Kley, Philippe Gaucher, Jonathan Brecko, Thomas Kleinteich, Anthony Herrel, and Dominique Adriaens (2022)

Regional differences in vertebral shape along the axial skeleton in caecilians (Amphibia: Gymnophiona)

Journal of Anatomy, 241(3):716--728.

Abstract Caecilians are elongate, limbless and annulated amphibians that, as far as is known, all have an at least partly fossorial lifestyle. It has been suggested that elongate limbless vertebrates show little morphological differentiation throughout the postcranial skeleton. However, relatively few studies have explored the axial skeleton in limbless tetrapods. In this study, we used ?CT data and three-dimensional geometric morphometrics to explore regional differences in vertebral shape across a broad range of caecilian species. Our results highlight substantial differences in vertebral shape along the axial skeleton, with anterior vertebrae being short and bulky, whereas posterior vertebrae are more elongated. This study shows that despite being limbless, elongate tetrapods such as caecilians still show regional heterogeneity in the shape of individual vertebrae along the vertebral column. Further studies are needed, however, to understand the possible causes and functional consequences of the observed variation in vertebral shape in caecilians.

RBINS Publication(s), EN, RBINS Collection(s), Impact Factor, Peer Review
axial skeleton; geometric morphometrics; intracolumnar variation; postcranial; segmentation
  • DOI: 10.1111/joa.13682
  • ISSN: 0021-8782

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