Project 4272: M. R. Whitney, B. K. Otoo, K. D. Angielczyk, S. E. Pierce. 2022. Fossil bone histology reveals ancient origins for rapid juvenile growth in tetrapods. Communications Biology. 5 (1):null.
Specimen: † Whatcheeria deltae (FMNH/PR:5022)
View: cross-section

Abstract

Patterns of growth throughout the lifetime of an animal reflect critical life history traits such as reproductive timing, physiology, and ecological interactions. The ancestral growth pattern for tetrapods has traditionally been described as slow-to-moderately paced, akin to modern amphibians, with fast growth and high metabolic rates considered a specialized physiological trait of amniotes. Here, we present bone histology from an ontogenetic series of the Early Carboniferous stem tetrapod Whatcheeria deltae, and document evidence of fibrolamellar bone—primary bone tissue associated with fast growth. Our data indicate that Whatcheeria juveniles grew rapidly and reached skeletal maturity quickly, allowing them to occupy a large-bodied predator niche in their paleoenvironment. This life history strategy contrasts with those described for other stem tetrapods and indicates that a diversity of growth patterns existed at the origins of tetrapod diversification. Importantly, Whatcheeria marks an unexpectedly early occurrence of fibrolamellar bone in Tetrapoda, both temporally and phylogenetically. These findings reveal that elevated juvenile growth is not limited to amniotes, but has a deep history in the tetrapod clade and may have played a previously unrecognized role in the tetrapod invasion of land.


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Article DOI: 10.1038/s42003-022-04079-0

Project DOI: 10.7934/P4272, http://dx.doi.org/10.7934/P4272
This project contains
  • 19 Media
  • 1 Taxon
  • 4 Specimens
Total size of project's media files: 31.49M

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MorphoBank Project 4272
  • Creation Date:
    06 June 2022
  • Publication Date:
    05 October 2022
  • Media downloads: 3

    Authors' Institutions

    • Harvard University

    • University of Chicago

    • Field Museum of Natural History



    Members

    member name taxa specimens media
    Megan Whitney
    Project Administrator
    1419


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    type number of downloads Individual items downloaded (where applicable)
    Total downloads from project3
    Media downloads3M844826 (1 download); M844810 (1 download); M844812 (1 download);