Litcius/Paper detail

Origin and Evolution of the Turtle Body Plan

Tyler R. Lyson, Gabriel S. Bever

2020Annual Review of Ecology Evolution and Systematics52 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The origin of turtles and their uniquely shelled body plan is one of the longest standing problems in vertebrate biology. The unfulfilled need for a hypothesis that both explains the derived nature of turtle anatomy and resolves their unclear phylogenetic position among reptiles largely reflects the absence of a transitional fossil record. Recent discoveries have dramatically improved this situation, providing an integrated, time-calibrated model of the morphological, developmental, and ecological transformations responsible for the modern turtle body plan. This evolutionary trajectory was initiated in the Permian (>260 million years ago) when a turtle ancestor with a diapsid skull evolved a novel mechanism for lung ventilation. This key innovation permitted the torso to become apomorphically stiff, most likely as an adaption for digging and a fossorial ecology. The construction of the modern turtle body plan then proceeded over the next 100 million years following a largely stepwise model of osteological innovation.

Topics & Concepts

Body planFossorialTurtle (robot)DiggingOsteologyVertebrateBiologyEcologyAncestorEvolutionary biologyPaleontologyZoologyGeographyFisheryArchaeologyGeneEmbryoBiochemistryPaleontology and Evolutionary BiologyTurtle Biology and ConservationEvolution and Paleontology Studies