Bone microstructure as an indicator of digging ability in moles (Talpidae, Eulipotyphla)

IF 1.8 3区 医学 Q2 ANATOMY & MORPHOLOGY Journal of Anatomy Pub Date : 2024-07-22 DOI:10.1111/joa.14114
Daichi Nakai, Yasushi Yokohata
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Abstract

Talpid moles (Talpidae, Eulipotyphla) are mammals highly specialised in burrowing using their forelimbs. Fossoriality has allowed moles to expand their ecological niche by enabling access to subterranean resources and spaces. This specialisation in burrowing has led to adaptations in the forelimb bones of moles for humeral rotation digging, a distinctive strategy unparalleled among other diggers. While bone robustness has been examined in moles through external morphology, the adaptation of bone microstructure to digging strategy remains unclear. Based on two assumptions, (1) the humerus of moles is subjected to a torsional load due to humeral rotation digging, and (2) the magnitude of torsional load correlates with the compactness of the substrate in which the individuals can dig, we hypothesised that humeral rotation digging influences bone microstructure. Comparative analyses of transverse sections from the humeri and femora of three mole species (Mogera imaizumii, Mogera wogura and Urotrichus talpoides; Talpidae) and an outgroup eulipotyphlan (Suncus murinus; Soricidae) revealed that (1) vascular canals distributed in the humeri of moles align more predominantly circumferential along the bone walls, indicating an adaptation to the torsion generated by humeral rotation digging, and (2) the laminarity of vascular canals, particularly in Mogera species compared with Urotrichus, potentially reflects differences in the magnitude of load due to substrate compactness during digging. The aligned vascular canals are distinctive traits not observed in mammals employing other digging strategies. This suggests that vascular canal laminarity can be an indicator of not only humeral rotation digging in fossorial animals, but also the variation of eco-spaces in talpid species.

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骨骼微结构作为鼹鼠(Talpidae, Eulipotyphla)挖掘能力的指标。
鼹鼠(Talpidae,Eulipotyphla)是一种非常擅长利用前肢穴居的哺乳动物。穴居使鼹鼠能够获得地下资源和空间,从而扩大了它们的生态位。鼹鼠的这种穴居特化使其前肢骨骼适应了肱骨旋转挖掘,这种独特的策略在其他挖掘者中是绝无仅有的。虽然通过外部形态学研究了鼹鼠骨骼的坚固性,但骨骼微观结构对挖掘策略的适应性仍不清楚。基于两个假设:(1)臼鼠的肱骨在肱骨旋转挖掘时会承受扭转负荷;(2)扭转负荷的大小与个体可以挖掘的基质的紧密程度相关,我们假设肱骨旋转挖掘会影响骨骼的微观结构。对三种鼹鼠(Mogera imaizumii、Mogera wogura 和 Urotrichus talpoides;Talpidae)和一种外群鼹鼠(Suncus murinus;Soricidae)发现:(1)分布在鼹鼠肱骨中的维管沿着骨壁更主要地呈圆周排列,这表明鼹鼠适应了肱骨旋转挖掘时产生的扭转;(2)维管的层状结构,特别是在 Mogera 种类中与 Urotrichus 相比,可能反映了挖掘时基质压实造成的负荷大小的差异。排列整齐的维管是在采用其他挖掘策略的哺乳动物身上观察不到的独特特征。这表明,维管管层状性不仅可以作为化石动物肱骨旋转挖掘的指标,还可以作为滑石物种生态空间变化的指标。
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来源期刊
Journal of Anatomy
Journal of Anatomy 医学-解剖学与形态学
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
8.30%
发文量
183
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Anatomy is an international peer-reviewed journal sponsored by the Anatomical Society. The journal publishes original papers, invited review articles and book reviews. Its main focus is to understand anatomy through an analysis of structure, function, development and evolution. Priority will be given to studies of that clearly articulate their relevance to the anatomical community. Focal areas include: experimental studies, contributions based on molecular and cell biology and on the application of modern imaging techniques and papers with novel methods or synthetic perspective on an anatomical system. Studies that are essentially descriptive anatomy are appropriate only if they communicate clearly a broader functional or evolutionary significance. You must clearly state the broader implications of your work in the abstract. We particularly welcome submissions in the following areas: Cell biology and tissue architecture Comparative functional morphology Developmental biology Evolutionary developmental biology Evolutionary morphology Functional human anatomy Integrative vertebrate paleontology Methodological innovations in anatomical research Musculoskeletal system Neuroanatomy and neurodegeneration Significant advances in anatomical education.
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