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The ichthyosaur integument: skin fibers, a means for a strong, flexible and smooth skin
Authors:Theagarten Lingham-Soliar
Abstract:The ichthyosaur skin is examined in order to further our understanding of the adaptation of these animals to the aquatic medium and their locomotory efficiency. Softtissue structures in two excellently preserved specimens of the ichthyosaur Stenopterygius quadricissus and in a partial skull of Ichthyosaurus provide unique data on the integument of advanced or tunniform ichthyosaurs. A system of fibers of three classes based on thickness and in different levels of the integument covered almost the entire surface of the body. The thickest fibers are located deepest in the skin and the thinnest outermost. The latter consist of at least two superimposed layers of fine fibers that extend in opposing directions to form a lattice or orthogonal meshwork. The angles of these fibers vary between 25 ° and 75 ° to the long axis of the animals, depending on their location in the body. The fibers of the two other size classes, lying deeper in the tissue, were observed in single layers. The thickest fibers extend in near parallel rows approximately 60 °-80 ° to the long axis of the animal in the area near the midpoint of the body and 90 ° in the post-dorsal fin region. The intermediate-sized fibers were apparently oriented at ca. 50 °-75 ° to the animal's long axis and were regularly spaced. Of considerable interest is their attachment dorsally to longitudinal fibers. This contrasts with the general condition of helically arranged fibers in fast-swimming marine vertebrates such as tuna and sharks, but compares with the condition in sirenians. Fibers were observed in the dorsal and caudal fins but not in the limbs. The fibers in ichthyosaurs are the thickest so far noted in marine vertebrates. The presence of a complex system of fibers, which includes an orthogonal meshwork of the finest of these, suggests that creasing of the skin would have been minimized, a condition highly important in reducing drag during the locomotion of marine animals.
Keywords:Orthogonal  Meshwork  Skin  Fibers  Strengthening  Swimming  Implications  Tunniform  Ichthyosaurs
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