| Literature DB >> 28203388 |
Marcelo R Sánchez-Villagra1, Analía M Forasiepi2.
Abstract
An overview of the literature on the chondrocranium of marsupial mammals reveals a relative conservatism in shape and structures. We document the histological cranial anatomy of individuals representing Monodelphis domestica, Dromiciops gliroides, Perameles sp. and Macropus eugenii. The marsupial chondrocranium is generally characterized by the great breadth of the lamina basalis, absence of pila metoptica and large otic capsules. Its most anterior portion (cupula nasi anterior) is robust, and anterior to it there are well-developed tactile sensory structures, functionally important in the neonate. Investigations of ossification centers at and around the nasal septum are needed to trace the presence of certain bones (e.g., mesethmoid, parasphenoid) across marsupial taxa. In many adult marsupials, the tympanic floor is formed by at least three bones: alisphenoid (alisphenoid tympanic process), ectotympanic and petrosal (rostral and caudal tympanic processes); the squamosal also contributes in some diprotodontians. The presence of an entotympanic in marsupials has not been convincingly demonstrated. The tubal element surrounding the auditory tube in most marsupials is fibrous connective tissue rather than cartilage; the latter is the case in most placentals recorded to date. However, we detected fibrocartilage in a late juvenile of Dromiciops, and a similar tissue has been reported for Tarsipes. Contradictory reports on the presence of the tegmen tympani can be found in the literature. We describe a small tegmen tympani in Macropus. Several heterochronic shifts in the timing of development of the chondocranium and associated structures (e.g., nerves, muscles) and in the ossification sequence have been interpreted as largely being influenced by functional requirements related to the altriciality of the newborn marsupial during early postnatal life. Comparative studies of chondocranial development of mammals can benefit from a solid phylogenetic framework, research on non-classical model organisms, and integration with imaging and sectional data derived from computer-tomography.Entities:
Keywords: Auditory bulla; Dromiciops; Entotympanic; Macropus; Monodelphis; Ontogeny; Perameles; Skull; Tegmen tympani; Tubal element
Year: 2017 PMID: 28203388 PMCID: PMC5303607 DOI: 10.1186/s40851-017-0062-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Zoological Lett ISSN: 2056-306X Impact factor: 2.836
Fig. 1Phylogeny of main species discussed in the text, representatives of several major groups of extant marsupials, including Didelphimorphia, Microbiotheria, Peramelemorphia and Diprotodontia. Phylogeny of diprotodontians is after Meredith et al. [211], of dasyuromorphians is after Westerman et al. [212]; major relationships among groups based on Gallus et al. [213] and Beck et al. [214]. Animal outlines modified from Horovitz and Sánchez-Villagra [102] and from Gallus et al. [213]
Fig. 2Cross-sections of Monodelphis domestica (PND 12, HL 8.5 mm) at the ethmoidal region, with detail of the vomeronasal complex. The asterisk (*) in c indicates the “outer bar” [49] or “fibula reuniens” [215] which is a lateral portion of the paraseptal cartilage. The double asterisk (**) in c indicates the lumen of VNO opening in the nasopalatine duct. Numbers of the histological serial sections are indicated at the bottom left of each figure
Fig. 3Cross-section of the vomeronasal complex of Dromiciops gliroides, ZIUT, HL 19 mm (a) and Perameles sp., ZIUT, HL 17.5 mm. (b) The asterisk (*) in a indicates the “outer bar”. Numbers of the histological serial sections are indicated at the bottom right of each figure. Numbers ascend in caudal direction
Fig. 4Cross-section of Monodelphis domestica (PND 12, HL 8.5 mm) at the ear region. Numbers of the histological serial sections are indicated at the bottom right of each figure. Numbers ascend in caudal direction
Fig. 5Cross-section of Monodelphis domestica (PND 12, HL 8.5 mm) at the level of the otic capsule. Numbers of the histological serial sections are indicated at the bottom right of each figure. Numbers ascend in caudal direction
Fig. 6Cross-section of Dromiciops gliroides (ZIUT, HL 19 mm) at the level of the ear region. Numbers of the histological serial sections are indicated at the bottom right of each figure. Numbers ascend in caudal direction
Fig. 7Cross-section of Dromiciops gliroides (ZIUT, HL 19 mm) with the fibrocartilaginous element of the auditory tube. Numbers of the histological serial sections are indicated at the bottom right of each figure
Fig. 8Cross-section of Dromiciops gliroides (ZIUT, HL 19 mm) at the level of the rostral part of the petrosal (pars cochlearis). Note the extensive contribution of the rtpp to the auditory capsule. Numbers of the histological serial sections are indicated at the bottom right of each figure. Numbers ascend in caudal direction
Fig. 9Cross-section of the petrosal of Dromiciops gliroides (ZIUT, HL 19 mm). Number of the histological serial section is indicated at the bottom right
Fig. 10Cross-section of Dromiciops gliroides (ZIUT, HL 19 mm) at the level of the caudal part the petrosal (pars canalicularis). Note the extensive contribution of the ctpp to the tympanic floor. Numbers of the histological serial sections are indicated at the bottom right of each figure. Numbers ascend in caudal direction
Fig. 11Cross-section of Perameles sp. (ZIUT, HL 17.5 mm) at the level of the ear region. Numbers of the histological serial sections are indicated at the bottom right of each figure. Numbers ascend in caudal direction
Fig. 12Cross-section of Perameles sp. (ZIUT, HL 17.5 mm) at the level of the otic capsule. In section 53.02.01, the lateral head vein is inside the prootic canal. The lateral head vein is the boundary for the prootic sinus and the sphenoparietal emissary vein, and it is retained in some adult marsupials [68]. Numbers of the histological serial sections are indicated at the bottom right of each figure. Numbers ascend in caudal direction
Fig. 13Cross-sections of Macropus eugenii (ZIUT, HL 29 mm) at the level of the ear region. Note the large epitympanic recess in b and c. Numbers of the histological serial sections are indicated at the bottom right of each figure. Numbers ascend in caudal direction
Fig. 14Cross-section of Macropus eugenii (ZIUT, HL 29 mm) at the level of the petrosal. In section 198.02.03, the lateral head vein is in the prootic canal. Numbers of the histological serial sections are indicated at the bottom right of each figure. Numbers ascend in caudal direction
Fig. 15Cross-section of Macropus eugenii (ZIUT, HL 29 mm) at the level of the caudal part the petrosal (pars canalicularis). Note the extensive ctpp (b and c) and the partial contribution to the floor of the tympanic cavity. Numbers of the histological serial sections are indicated at the bottom right of each figure. Numbers ascend in caudal direction
Fig. 16Cross-section of Thylogale billardierii (ZIUT, HL 13 mm) at the level of the hypophysis. The chondrocranial braincase wall if formed by the lamina ascendens of the ala temporalis and the membrana sphenoobturatoria, which in this specimen have started ossification. Numbers of the histological serial sections are indicated at the bottom right of each figure. Numbers ascend in caudal direction
List of the the abbreviations used throughout the figures of this paper
| a., artery |
Features listed by de Beer [1] as characteristic of marsupials. Several of the features do not concern the chondrocranium directly, but are listed here for the sake of completeness. The titles of each of three sections are taken from de Beer’s [1] formulation
| “Reptilian” features of marsupials that are shared with monotremes and are absent in placentals ([ |
| “The characteristic features of the developing marsupial skull apart from those shared with monotremes (see above) and with placentals (see below)…are not clear cut” ([ |
| “… features shared by marsupials and placentals…” ([ |
Features of the ethmoidal region hypothesized to be part of the marsupial “Grundplan” by Freyer [94], based on her critical assessment of ontogenetic and comparative anatomical data of the group
| A rostrally wide closed cupula nasi anterior |
Fig. 17Dorsal view of the chondrocranium of a diprotodontian marsupial, the wallaby Wallabia rufogrisea (CRL 37 mm) modified from Müller [61]. On the right side, depicted also the dermal bones documented at this stage
Fig. 18Dorsal view of chondrocrania of marsupials at different stages of development. On the right side, depicted also the dermal bones documented at the respective stage. Drawings were modified from the cited sources. Measurements are in millimeters. Depicted are models of the short-tailed opossum Monodelphis domestica by Maier [57], the opossum Didelphis marsupialis by Toeplitz [53], the bare-tailed woolly opossum Caluromys philander by Denison and Terry [54], the short nose bandicoot Isoodon obesulus by Esdaile [56], the long-nosed bandicoot Perameles nasuta by Cords [55], the eastern quoll Dasyurus viverrinus by Broom [51], the wombat Vombatus ursinus by Klutzny [60], and the wallaby Wallabia rufogrisea by Müller [61]
Fig. 19General schematic view of the anterior part of the nasal chondrocranium indicating its major features. Modified from Klima [216]
Fig. 20Schematic view of consecutive cross sections of the left paraseptal cartilage (light) and vomeronasal organ (dark) in a Caluromys philander (ZIUT-nn), b Sminthopsis sp. (ZIUT-nn), c Thylogale billardieri (ZIUT, HL 13 mm) and d Dromiciops gliroides (ZIUT, HL 19 mm). Not to scale. Notice that the relations of the outer bar, the vomeronasal organ and the main body of the paraseptal cartilage, are similar between the dasyurid (b) and Dromiciops (d). Australian marsupials and Dromiciops (b, c, d) have a dorsal extension of the paraseptal cartilage with regard to the outer bar that is lacking in didelphids (a)
Fig. 21A schematic sagittal section serves to illustrate the whole of the head at postnatal age 1-day in the opossum Monodelphis domestica (drawing based on photograph published by Maier [75], p.62). The epiglottis reaches the dorsal side of the velum. Notice the lack of a chondocranial coverage of the dorsal brain, present in monotremes [12, 45]
Relations of the ala temporalis to the branches of the trigeminal nerve in several marsupials. Trichosurus A: “young”. Trichosurus B: “older”
| Taxon | Between | V2 traverses | Between | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Didelphidae | ||||
|
| X | Maier, 1987 [ | ||
|
| X | Fuchs, 1915 [ | ||
|
| X | Maier, 1987 [ | ||
|
| X | Maier, 1987 [ | ||
| Dasyuridae | ||||
|
| X | Maier, 1987 [ | ||
|
| X | Broom, 1909 [ | ||
| Peramelidae | ||||
|
| ?X | Maier, 1987 [ | ||
|
| X | Esdaile, 1916 [ | ||
| Phalangeridae | ||||
|
| X | de Beer, 1926 [ | ||
|
| X | Broom, 1909 [ | ||
| Petauridae | ||||
|
| X | This work | ||
| Macropodidae | ||||
|
| X | Maier, 1987 [ | ||
|
| X | Klutzny, 1994 [ | ||
| Acrobatidae | ||||
|
| X | Maier, 1987 [ | ||
| Vombatidae | ||||
|
| X | Klutzny, 1994 | ||
Fig. 22Left side of chondrocranium, without membrane bones, in bandicoots (Peramelemorphia) at different stages of development. Cardboard reconstructions, modified from Esdaile [56]. Top, cf. Isoodon obesulus, Perameles obesula in the original paper, Stage II. TL 15.5 mm. HL 6.0 mm (× 25.); middle, Perameles nasuta, Stage IV. TL 23.0 mm. HL 11.0 mm (× 12.); bottom, Perameles nasuta, Stage V. TL 35.0 mm. HL 18.5 mm (× 7.)
Fig. 23Schematic drawing of the cross section of the basicranium of Dactylopsila sp. (DUCEC-8323, section 1313 Plate 6a). This species exhibits the typical bullar condition of most diprotodontians, consisting of a squamosal roof of the middle ear, and a squamosal process contributing to the lateral side of the bulla overlain medially in part by a tympanic process of the alisphenoid