{"title":"Anatomy of the Critically-Endangered Anji Salamander (Hynobius amjiensis) Provides New Insights Into Morphological Evolution of Salamanders.","authors":"Cang-Song Chen, Jia Jia, Xian-Ting Wang, Jia Yang, Ke-Qin Gao","doi":"10.1002/jmor.70028","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>The Anji Salamander (Hynobius amjiensis) is a critically-endangered amphibian endemic to the Tianmushan Mountain area in southeastern China. As most of its congeneric species in the ancestral salamander family Hynobiidae, the osteology of H. amjiensis has remained essentially unknown and has hampered efforts in understanding morphological evolutionary patterns of early salamanders. Here, we investigate the skeletal anatomy of H. amjiensis based on microcomputed tomography scans of post-metamorphosed juvenile and adult specimens. Our results reveal Hynobiidae has more early-tetrapod-like plesiomorphic characters than expected, as H. amjiensis has a stapedial foramen in the middle ear and two centralia and a centrale-radius contact in the limb. We demonstrate that Hynobius amjiensis is the first known living salamander species with a stapedial foramen whose absence was believed to unite salamanders and anurans, and hence opens major questions on the evolution of the middle ear in modern amphibians: if some salamanders and caecilians had a stapedial foramen inherited from their common ancestor, when and how many times was the foramen lost independently in modern amphibians, and how did this structural loss impact the phylogenetic evolution of salamander clades? Our findings of hyper-ossified pectoral and pelvic girdles and loss of postminimus in the pes in H. amjiensis demonstrate that functional morphological features in hynobiids are potentially informative in phylogeny and ontogeny of early salamanders.</p>","PeriodicalId":16528,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Morphology","volume":"286 2","pages":"e70028"},"PeriodicalIF":1.5000,"publicationDate":"2025-02-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Morphology","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1002/jmor.70028","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"ANATOMY & MORPHOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The Anji Salamander (Hynobius amjiensis) is a critically-endangered amphibian endemic to the Tianmushan Mountain area in southeastern China. As most of its congeneric species in the ancestral salamander family Hynobiidae, the osteology of H. amjiensis has remained essentially unknown and has hampered efforts in understanding morphological evolutionary patterns of early salamanders. Here, we investigate the skeletal anatomy of H. amjiensis based on microcomputed tomography scans of post-metamorphosed juvenile and adult specimens. Our results reveal Hynobiidae has more early-tetrapod-like plesiomorphic characters than expected, as H. amjiensis has a stapedial foramen in the middle ear and two centralia and a centrale-radius contact in the limb. We demonstrate that Hynobius amjiensis is the first known living salamander species with a stapedial foramen whose absence was believed to unite salamanders and anurans, and hence opens major questions on the evolution of the middle ear in modern amphibians: if some salamanders and caecilians had a stapedial foramen inherited from their common ancestor, when and how many times was the foramen lost independently in modern amphibians, and how did this structural loss impact the phylogenetic evolution of salamander clades? Our findings of hyper-ossified pectoral and pelvic girdles and loss of postminimus in the pes in H. amjiensis demonstrate that functional morphological features in hynobiids are potentially informative in phylogeny and ontogeny of early salamanders.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Morphology welcomes articles of original research in cytology, protozoology, embryology, and general morphology. Articles generally should not exceed 35 printed pages. Preliminary notices or articles of a purely descriptive morphological or taxonomic nature are not included. No paper which has already been published will be accepted, nor will simultaneous publications elsewhere be allowed.
The Journal of Morphology publishes research in functional, comparative, evolutionary and developmental morphology from vertebrates and invertebrates. Human and veterinary anatomy or paleontology are considered when an explicit connection to neontological animal morphology is presented, and the paper contains relevant information for the community of animal morphologists. Based on our long tradition, we continue to seek publishing the best papers in animal morphology.