| Literature DB >> 20625398 |
Julie A Meachen-Samuels1, Blaire Van Valkenburgh.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The sabertooth cat, Smilodon fatalis, was an enigmatic predator without a true living analog. Their elongate canine teeth were more vulnerable to fracture than those of modern felids, making it imperative for them to immobilize prey with their forelimbs when making a kill. As a result, their need for heavily muscled forelimbs likely exceeded that of modern felids and thus should be reflected in their skeletons. Previous studies on forelimb bones of S. fatalis found them to be relatively robust but did not quantify their ability to withstand loading. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20625398 PMCID: PMC2896400 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0011412
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Regression coefficients of log10 humeral or femoral cortical variables against the respective log10 bone (humerus or femur) length.
| variable | R2 | slope | intercept | SEE |
| CA humerus | 0.970 | 2.635 | −3.888 | 0.083 |
| Ix humerus | 0.974 | 5.434 | −8.792 | 0.160 |
| Iy humerus | 0.976 | 5.148 | −8.348 | 0.145 |
| J/2 humerus | 0.975 | 5.323 | −8.630 | 0.153 |
| J/2 femur | 0.966 | 4.694 | −7.526 | 0.169 |
(SEE, standard error of the estimate. S. fatalis was not included in any regression equations.)
Figure 1Regressions of humerus and femur cortical measurements against lengths.
Log10/log10 regressions of a) humerus Ix; b) humerus Iy; c) humerus J/2 against humerus length; and d) femur J/2 against femur length. S. fatalis was not included in regression calculations. Confidence intervals (95%) were based on individual species. Regression statistics are in Table 1. PAT = Panthera atrox, SFA = Smilodon fatalis, see Table S1 for extant species numbers.
Figure 2Radiographic images of jaguar, Panthera onca, and Smilodon fatalis humeri.
Jaguar humerus USNM 49393 taken in the a) craniocaudal and b) mediolateral plane, and of Smilodon fatalis humerus LACMHC K-762 in c) craniocaudal and d) mediolateral plane. White bars indicate subperiosteal diameter and black bars indicate endosteal diameter. Between each view is a cross-sectional representation of each bone, “Cr” represents the cranial face of the cross-section.
Mean (+/− SD) values for K craniocaudal, K mediolateral, CA, and J/2 for Smilodon fatalis, all other cats sampled in this study (including pantherins), and only large pantherins .
|
| all cats | pantherins only1 | ||||
| humerus | femur | humerus | femur | humerus | femur | |
| Kcc | 0.513 (0.060) | 0.514 (0.059) | 0.629 | 0.597 | 0.616 | 0.577 |
| Kml | 0.494 (0.081) | 0.494 (0.073) | 0.581 | 0.622 | 0.528 | 0.580 |
| CA | 3.033 (0.050) | 2.805 (0.055) | 2.038 | 2.101 | 2.708 | 2.593 |
| J/2 | 5.211 (0.085) | 4.743 (0.075) | 3.331 | 3.447 | 4.641 | 4.393 |
(Pantherins include P. atrox, P. leo, P. tigris, P. onca, P. pardus and P. uncia.
(*) indicates a significant difference between S. fatalis and pantherins or between S. fatalis and all other cats in a Mann-Whitney U-test (p<0.05).)