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Trabecular architecture in the forelimb epiphyses of extant xenarthrans (Mammalia)
Authors:Eli Amson  Patrick Arnold  Anneke H. van Heteren  Aurore Canoville  John A. Nyakatura
Affiliation:1.AG Morphologie und Formengeschichte, Institut für Biologie,Humboldt Universit?t zu Berlin,Berlin,Germany;2.Bild Wissen Gestaltung. Ein Interdisziplin?res Labor,Humboldt Universit?t zu Berlin,Berlin,Germany;3.Institut für Spezielle Zoologie und Evolutionsbiologie mit Phyletischem Museum,Friedrich-Schiller-Universit?t Jena,Jena,Germany;4.Sektion Mammalogie,Zoologische Staatssammlung München, Staatliche Naturwissenschaftliche Sammlungen Bayerns,Munich,Germany;5.Steinmann Institute for Geology, Mineralogy, and Paleontology,University of Bonn,Bonn,Germany
Abstract:

Background

Bone structure has a crucial role in the functional adaptations that allow vertebrates to conduct their diverse lifestyles. Much has been documented regarding the diaphyseal structure of long bones of tetrapods. However, the architecture of trabecular bone, which is for instance found within the epiphyses of long bones, and which has been shown experimentally to be extremely plastic, has received little attention in the context of lifestyle adaptations (virtually only in primates). We therefore investigated the forelimb epiphyses of extant xenarthrans, the placental mammals including the sloths, anteaters, and armadillos. They are characterised by several lifestyles and degrees of fossoriality involving distinct uses of their forelimb. We used micro computed tomography data to acquire 3D trabecular parameters at regions of interest (ROIs) for all extant genera of xenarthrans (with replicates). Traditional, spherical, and phylogenetically informed statistics (including the consideration of size effects) were used to characterise the functional signal of these parameters.

Results

Several trabecular parameters yielded functional distinctions. The main direction of the trabeculae distinguished lifestyle categories for one ROI (the radial trochlea). Among the other trabecular parameters, it is the degree of anisotropy (i.e., a preferential alignment of the trabeculae) that yielded the clearest functional signal. For all ROIs, the armadillos, which represent the fully terrestrial and fossorial category, were found as characterised by a greater degree of anisotropy (i.e., more aligned trabeculae). Furthermore, the trabeculae of the humeral head of the most fossorial armadillos were also found to be more anisotropic than in the less fossorial species.

Conclusions

Most parameters were marked by an important intraspecific variability and by a size effect, which could, at least partly, be masking the functional signal. But for some parameters, the degree of anisotropy in particular, a clear functional distinction was recovered. Along with data on primates, our findings suggest that a trabecular architecture characterised by a greater degree of anisotropy is to be expected in species in which the relevant epiphyses withstand a restricted range of load directions. Trabecular architecture therefore is a promising research avenue for the reconstruction of lifestyles in extinct or cryptic species.
Keywords:
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