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The Development and Evolution of the Turtle Body Plan: Inferring Intrinsic Aspects of the Evolutionary Process from Experimental Embryology
Authors:BURKE  ANN CAMPBELL
Institution:Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138
Abstract:The body plan of turtles is unique among tetrapods in the presenceof the shell. The structure of the carapace involves a uniquerelationship between the axial and the appendicular skeletons.A common developmental mechanism, an epithelial-mesenchymalinteraction, has been identified in the early stages of carapacedevelopment by means of basic histological and immunofluorescencetechniques. By analogy to other structures initiated by epithelial-mesenchymalinteractions, it is hypothesized that carapace development isdependent on this interaction in the body wall. Surgical perturbationswere designed to test the causal connection between the epithelial-mesenchymalinteraction in the body wall and the unusual placement of theribs in turtles. By comparison to data available on body wallformation in avian embryos, these experiments also shed lighton the segregation of somitic and lateral plate cell populationsand the embryonic origin of the scapula in turtles. This study specifically addresses the ontogeny of a unique tetrapodbody plan. The ontogenetic information can be used to make inferencesabout the phytogeny of this body plan and how it could haveevolved from the more typical primitive tetrapod. On a moregeneral level this studyexplores the potential role of commondevelopmental mechanisms in the generation of evolutionary novelties,and the developmental incongruities between homologous skeletalelements in different groups of tetrapods.
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