Literature DB >> 26331544

Evolutionary origin of the turtle skull.

G S Bever1,2,3, Tyler R Lyson3,4, Daniel J Field5, Bhart-Anjan S Bhullar5,6.   

Abstract

Transitional fossils informing the origin of turtles are among the most sought-after discoveries in palaeontology. Despite strong genomic evidence indicating that turtles evolved from within the diapsid radiation (which includes all other living reptiles), evidence of the inferred transformation between an ancestral turtle with an open, diapsid skull to the closed, anapsid condition of modern turtles remains elusive. Here we use high-resolution computed tomography and a novel character/taxon matrix to study the skull of Eunotosaurus africanus, a 260-million-year-old fossil reptile from the Karoo Basin of South Africa, whose distinctive postcranial skeleton shares many unique features with the shelled body plan of turtles. Scepticism regarding the status of Eunotosaurus as the earliest stem turtle arises from the possibility that these shell-related features are the products of evolutionary convergence. Our phylogenetic analyses indicate strong cranial support for Eunotosaurus as a critical transitional form in turtle evolution, thus fortifying a 40-million-year extension to the turtle stem and moving the ecological context of its origin back onto land. Furthermore, we find unexpected evidence that Eunotosaurus is a diapsid reptile in the process of becoming secondarily anapsid. This is important because categorizing the skull based on the number of openings in the complex of dermal bone covering the adductor chamber has long held sway in amniote systematics, and still represents a common organizational scheme for teaching the evolutionary history of the group. These discoveries allow us to articulate a detailed and testable hypothesis of fenestral closure along the turtle stem. Our results suggest that Eunotosaurus represents a crucially important link in a chain that will eventually lead to consilience in reptile systematics, paving the way for synthetic studies of amniote evolution and development.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26331544     DOI: 10.1038/nature14900

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  19 in total

1.  A likelihood approach to estimating phylogeny from discrete morphological character data.

Authors:  P O Lewis
Journal:  Syst Biol       Date:  2001 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 15.683

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Journal:  Bioinformatics       Date:  2003-08-12       Impact factor: 6.937

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Authors:  Bhart-Anjan S Bhullar; Jesús Marugán-Lobón; Fernando Racimo; Gabe S Bever; Timothy B Rowe; Mark A Norell; Arhat Abzhanov
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2012-07-12       Impact factor: 49.962

4.  An ancestral turtle from the Late Triassic of southwestern China.

Authors:  Chun Li; Xiao-Chun Wu; Olivier Rieppel; Li-Ting Wang; Li-Jun Zhao
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2008-11-27       Impact factor: 49.962

5.  Evolutionary origin of the turtle shell.

Authors:  Tyler R Lyson; Gabe S Bever; Torsten M Scheyer; Allison Y Hsiang; Jacques A Gauthier
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2013-05-30       Impact factor: 10.834

6.  Turtle origins: insights from phylogenetic retrofitting and molecular scaffolds.

Authors:  M S Y Lee
Journal:  J Evol Biol       Date:  2013-10-31       Impact factor: 2.411

7.  Finding the frame shift: digit loss, developmental variability, and the origin of the avian hand.

Authors:  Gabe S Bever; Jacques A Gauthier; Günter P Wagner
Journal:  Evol Dev       Date:  2011 May-Jun       Impact factor: 1.930

8.  A Middle Triassic stem-turtle and the evolution of the turtle body plan.

Authors:  Rainer R Schoch; Hans-Dieter Sues
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2015-06-24       Impact factor: 49.962

Review 9.  Temporal bone arrangements in turtles: an overview.

Authors:  Ingmar Werneburg
Journal:  J Exp Zool B Mol Dev Evol       Date:  2012-06       Impact factor: 2.656

10.  Toward consilience in reptile phylogeny: miRNAs support an archosaur, not lepidosaur, affinity for turtles.

Authors:  Daniel J Field; Jacques A Gauthier; Benjamin L King; Davide Pisani; Tyler R Lyson; Kevin J Peterson
Journal:  Evol Dev       Date:  2014-05-05       Impact factor: 1.930

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  18 in total

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Authors:  Mark J MacDougall; Neil Brocklehurst; Jörg Fröbisch
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2019-03-27       Impact factor: 5.349

2.  Slow and steady: the evolution of cranial disparity in fossil and recent turtles.

Authors:  Christian Foth; Walter G Joyce
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2016-11-30       Impact factor: 5.349

3.  Were the synapsids primitively endotherms? A palaeohistological approach using phylogenetic eigenvector maps.

Authors:  Mathieu G Faure-Brac; Jorge Cubo
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2020-01-13       Impact factor: 6.237

4.  The phylogenetic relationships of basal archosauromorphs, with an emphasis on the systematics of proterosuchian archosauriforms.

Authors:  Martín D Ezcurra
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2016-04-28       Impact factor: 2.984

5.  Anatomy of the dinosaur Pampadromaeus barberenai (Saurischia-Sauropodomorpha) from the Late Triassic Santa Maria Formation of southern Brazil.

Authors:  Max Cardoso Langer; Blair Wayne McPhee; Júlio César de Almeida Marsola; Lúcio Roberto-da-Silva; Sérgio Furtado Cabreira
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-02-20       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  A toothed turtle from the Late Jurassic of China and the global biogeographic history of turtles.

Authors:  Walter G Joyce; Márton Rabi; James M Clark; Xing Xu
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2016-10-28       Impact factor: 3.260

7.  A tiny Triassic saurian from Connecticut and the early evolution of the diapsid feeding apparatus.

Authors:  Adam C Pritchard; Jacques A Gauthier; Michael Hanson; Gabriel S Bever; Bhart-Anjan S Bhullar
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2018-03-23       Impact factor: 14.919

8.  Homeotic shift at the dawn of the turtle evolution.

Authors:  Tomasz Szczygielski
Journal:  R Soc Open Sci       Date:  2017-04-05       Impact factor: 2.963

9.  Reacquisition of the lower temporal bar in sexually dimorphic fossil lizards provides a rare case of convergent evolution.

Authors:  Tiago R Simões; Gregory F Funston; Behzad Vafaeian; Randall L Nydam; Michael R Doschak; Michael W Caldwell
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-04-13       Impact factor: 4.379

10.  Comparative Genomics Identifies Epidermal Proteins Associated with the Evolution of the Turtle Shell.

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Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2015-11-24       Impact factor: 16.240

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