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Musculoskeletal modeling of sprawling and parasagittal forelimbs provides insight into synapsid postural transition

Robert J. Brocklehurst, Philip Fahn‐Lai, Sophie Regnault, Stephanie E. Pierce

2021iScience42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The sprawling-parasagittal postural shift was a major transition during synapsid evolution, underpinned by reorganization of the forelimb, and considered key to mammalian ecological diversity. Determining when and how this transition occurred in the fossil record is challenging owing to limited comparative data on extant species. Here, we built forelimb musculoskeletal models of three extant taxa that bracket sprawling-parasagittal postures-tegu lizard, echidna, and opossum-and tested the relationship between three-dimensional joint mobility, muscle action, and posture. Results demonstrate clear functional variation between postural grades, with the parasagittal opossum occupying a distinct region of pose space characterized by a highly retracted and depressed shoulder joint that emphasizes versatility and humeral elevation. Applying our data to the fossil record support trends of an increasingly retracted humerus and greater elevation muscle moment arms indicative of more parasagittal postures throughout synapsid evolution.

Topics & Concepts

ForelimbExtant taxonOpossumAnatomyFossil RecordBiologyEvolutionary biologyHumerusPaleontologyEvolution and Paleontology StudiesAmphibian and Reptile BiologyPaleontology and Evolutionary Biology
Musculoskeletal modeling of sprawling and parasagittal forelimbs provides insight into synapsid postural transition | Litcius