• Limb orientation in Therians

    From erik simpson@eastside.erik@gmail.com to sc.bio.paleontology on Sat Oct 26 09:12:17 2024
    From Newsgroup: sci.bio.paleontology

    https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adr2722

    Late acquisition of erect hindlimb posture and function in the
    forerunners of therian mammals

    Abstract
    The evolutionary transition from early synapsids to therian mammals
    involved profound reorganization in locomotor anatomy and function,
    centered around a shift from rCLsprawledrCY to rCLerectrCY limb postures. When and how this functional shift was accomplished has remained difficult to decipher from the fossil record alone. Through biomechanical modeling of hindlimb force-generating performance in eight exemplar fossil
    synapsids, we demonstrate that the erect locomotor regime typifying
    modern therians did not evolve until just before crown Theria. Modeling
    also identifies a transient phase of increased performance in therapsids
    and early cynodonts, before crown mammals. Further, quantifying the
    global actions of major hip muscle groups indicates a protracted
    juxtaposition of functional redeployment and conservatism, highlighting
    the intricate interplay between anatomical reorganization and function
    across postural transitions. We infer a complex history of synapsid
    locomotor evolution and suggest that major evolutionary transitions
    between contrasting locomotor behaviors may follow highly nonlinear trajectories.

    Nothing really new here, but a detailed account of when and how the many adaptions that led from sprawled to upright posture in mammals. A
    similar study on the same adaptations in the reptile lineage would also
    be very interesting.
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