| Literature DB >> 23418610 |
Alida M Bailleul1, Brian K Hall, John R Horner.
Abstract
The skull and jaws of extant birds possess secondary cartilage, a tissue that arises after bone formation during embryonic development at articulations, ligamentous and muscular insertions. Using histological analysis, we discovered secondary cartilage in a non-avian dinosaur embryo, Hypacrosaurus stebingeri (Ornithischia, Lambeosaurinae). This finding extends our previous report of secondary cartilage in post-hatching specimens of the same dinosaur species. It provides the first information on the ontogeny of avian and dinosaurian secondary cartilages, and further stresses their developmental similarities. Secondary cartilage was found in an embryonic dentary within a tooth socket where it is hypothesized to have arisen due to mechanical stresses generated during tooth formation. Two patterns were discerned: secondary cartilage is more restricted in location in this Hypacrosaurus embryo, than it is in Hypacrosaurus post-hatchlings; secondary cartilage occurs at far more sites in bird embryos and nestlings than in Hypacrosaurus. This suggests an increase in the number of sites of secondary cartilage during the evolution of birds. We hypothesize that secondary cartilage provided advantages in the fine manipulation of food and was selected over other types of tissues/articulations during the evolution of the highly specialized avian beak from the jaws of their dinosaurian ancestors.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23418610 PMCID: PMC3572077 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0056937
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Secondary chondrogenesis investigated in hadrosaurid embryos.
(A) Reconstruction of the embryonic skull of Hypacrosaurus stebingeri, reproduced with permission [21] with anatomical locations 1, 2 and 3 in green. (B) Transverse section of the surangular of a Hadrosauridae indet. (MOR 1038). (C) Close-up of the red box in (B). The dorso-caudal face (Location 1) does not show any remnant of SC. (D) Coronal section of the maxilla of Hypacrosaurus stebingeri (MOR 559). (E) Close-up of the red box in (D). The bucco-caudal face of the maxilla (Location 2) does not show any remnants of SC. (F) Coronal section of the dentary of Hypacrosaurus stebingeri (MOR 559). (G) Close-up of the red box in (F). The arrow indicates a remnant of dentine. (H) Close-up of the red box in (G). (F) and (G) show alveolar bone (white asterisks) and incomplete alveoli with missing teeth (black asterisk; Location 3). (G) and (H) show a SC islet. All sections are shown under natural light. do, dorsal; la, labial; li, lingual; ro, rostral.
List of the hadrosaurid membrane bones thin-sectioned and examined in this study.
| Taxon | Specimen no. | Ontogenetic stage | Element | Length (rosto-caudal) (cm) | Formation and locality |
| Hadrosauridae indet. | MOR 1038 | embryonic | Surangular | 2.1 | Judith River: JR-144Q |
|
| MOR 559 | embryonic | Dentary* | 5.1 | Two Medicine: TM-066 |
|
| MOR 559 | embryonic | Frontal | 3.6 | Two Medicine: TM-066 |
|
| MOR 559 | embryonic | Maxilla | 5.0 | Two Medicine: TM-066 |
|
| MOR 559 | embryonic | Parietal | 3.2 | Two Medicine: TM-066 |
|
| MOR-YMP430.Sa | embryonic | Surangular | 1.7 | Two Medicine: TM-160 |
|
| MOR 548 | post-hatching (in | Dentary* | 9.0 | Two Medicine: TM-066 |
|
| MOR 548 | post-hatching (in | Maxilla* | 8.8 | Two Medicine: TM-066 |
|
| MOR 548 | post-hatching (in | Surangular* | 4.1 | Two Medicine: TM-066 |
(The asterisks designate bones that had remnants of SC)
List of the sites analysed for secondary chondrogenesis.
| Articulations or contact zones |
| dentary-predentary |
| dentary-surangular |
| mandibular symphysis |
| maxilla-coronoid process of dentary (Location 2) |
| maxilla-jugal |
| maxilla-premaxilla |
| maxilla-pterygoid |
| surangular-angular |
| surangular-quadrate (Location 1) |
|
|
| dentary* (Location 3) |
| Maxilla |
|
|
| m. pterygoideus ventralis (surangular) |
| m. pseudotemporalis profundus (surangular/mandibular fossa) |
| m. pseudotemporalis superficialis (coronoid process/mandibular fossa) |
| m. adductor mandibulae externus profundus (coronoid process) |
| m. adductor mandibulae externus medialis (coronoid process/surangular) |
| m. adductor mandibulae externus superficialis (surangular) |
| m. adductor mandibulae posterior (mandibular fossa) |
| m. depressor mandibulae (surangular) |
|
|
| frontal-frontal |
| frontal-nasal |
| frontal-parietal |
| parietal-frontal |
| parietal-squamosal |
(The asterisk indicates where SC was found).
Figure 2Phylogenetic relationships of some dinosaurian species and clades.
Cladistic analysis (e.g., [34]) divides the Dinosauria into the Ornithischia (including Hypacrosaurus and Maiasaura from this study) and the Saurischia (with the Sauropoda and the Theropoda, the latter including birds). Based on the distribution of secondary cartilages discussed in this paper, secondary chondrogenesis is hypothesized to be a synapomorphy of the Dinosauria (red dash).