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Dactyly

In biology, dactyly is the arrangement of digits (fingers and toes) on the hands, feet, or sometimes wings of a tetrapod animal. It comes from the Greek word δακτυλος (dáktylos) = "finger".

Human hand anatomy (pentadactyl)

Sometimes the ending "-dactylia" is used. The derived adjectives end with "-dactyl" or "-dactylous".

As a normal feature Edit

Pentadactyly Edit

Pentadactyly (from Greek πέντε pénte "five") is the condition of having five digits on each limb. It is traditionally believed that all living tetrapods are descended from an ancestor with a pentadactyl limb, although many species have now lost or transformed some or all of their digits by the process of evolution. However, this viewpoint was challenged by Stephen Jay Gould in his 1991 essay "Eight (Or Fewer) Little Piggies", where he pointed out polydactyly in early tetrapods and described the specializations of digit reduction.[1] Despite the individual variations listed below, the relationship is to the original five-digit model.

In reptiles, the limbs are pentadactylous.

Dogs and cats have tetradactylous paws but the dewclaw makes them pentadactyls.

Tetradactyly Edit

Tetradactyly (from Greek τετρα tetra "four") is the condition of having four digits on a limb, as in many birds, amphibians, and theropod dinosaurs.

Tridactyly Edit

 
Tridactylous Allosaurus arm

Tridactyly (from Greek τρία tría "three") is the condition of having three digits on a limb, as in the rhinoceros and ancestors of the horse such as Protohippus and Hipparion. These all belong to the Perissodactyla. Some birds also have three toes, including emus, bustards, and quail.

Didactyly Edit

Didactyly (from Greek δι- di- "two") or bidactyly is the condition of having two digits on each limb, as in the Hypertragulidae and two-toed sloth, Choloepus didactylus. In humans this name is used for an abnormality in which the middle digits are missing, leaving only the thumb and fifth finger, or big and little toes. Cloven-hoofed mammals (such as deer, sheep and cattle – Artiodactyla) have only two digits, as do ostriches.

Monodactyly Edit

Monodactyly (from Greek μόνος monos- "one") is the condition of having a single digit on a limb, as in modern horses and other equidae (though one study suggests that the frog might be composed of remnants of digits II and IV, rendering horses as not truly monodactyl[2]) as well as sthenurine kangaroos. Functional monodactyly, where the weight is supported on only one of multiple toes, can also occur, as in the theropod dinosaur Vespersaurus. The pterosaur Nyctosaurus retained only the wing finger on the forelimb, rendering it also partially monodactyl.[3]

As a congenital defect Edit

Among humans, the term "five-fingered hand" is sometimes used to mean the abnormality of having five fingers, none of which is a thumb.[citation needed]

Syndactyly Edit

 
Human foot with partial simple syndactyly.

Syndactyly (from Greek συν- syn "together") is a condition where two or more digits are fused together. It occurs normally in some mammals, such as the siamang and most diprotodontid marsupials such as kangaroos. It occurs as an unusual condition in humans.

Polydactyly Edit

Polydactyly (from Greek πολυ- poly- "many") is when a limb has more than the usual number of digits. This can be:

  • As a result of congenital abnormality in a normally pentadactyl animal. Polydactyly is very common among domestic cats. For more information, see polydactyly.
  • Polydactyly in early tetrapod aquatic animals, such as in Acanthostega gunnari (Jarvik 1952), one of an increasing number of genera of stem-tetrapods known from the Upper Devonian, which are providing insights into the appearance of tetrapods and the origin of limbs with digits. It also occurs secondarily in some later tetrapods, such as ichthyosaurs. The use of a term normally reserved for congenital defects reflects that it was regarded as an anomaly at the time, as it was believed that all modern tetrapods have either five digits or ancestors that did.

Oligodactyly Edit

Oligodactyly (from Greek ὀλιγο- oligo- "few") is having too few digits when not caused by an amputation. It is sometimes incorrectly called hypodactyly or confused with aphalangia, the absence of the phalanx bone on one or (commonly) more digits. When all the digits on a hand or foot are absent, it is referred to as adactyly.[4]

Ectrodactyly Edit

Ectrodactyly, also known as split-hand malformation, is the congenital absence of one or more central digits of the hands and feet. Consequently, it is a form of oligodactyly. News anchor Bree Walker is probably the best-known person with this condition, which affects about one in 91,000 people.[citation needed] It is conspicuously more common in the Vadoma in Zimbabwe.

Clinodactyly Edit

Clinodactyly is a medical term describing the curvature of a digit (a finger or toe) in the plane of the palm, most commonly the fifth finger (the "little finger") towards the adjacent fourth finger (the "ring finger"). It is a fairly common isolated anomaly which often goes unnoticed, but also occurs in combination with other abnormalities in certain genetic syndromes, such as Down syndrome, Turner syndrome and Cornelia de Lange syndrome.

In birds Edit

 
Four types of bird feet
(right foot diagrams)

Anisodactyly Edit

Anisodactyly is the most common arrangement of digits in birds, with three toes forward and one back. This is common in songbirds and other perching birds, as well as hunting birds such as eagles, hawks, and falcons. This arrangement of digits help with perching and/or climbing and clinging. This occurs in Passeriformes, Columbiformes, Falconiformes, Accipitriformes, Galliformes and a majority of other birds.

Syndactyly Edit

Syndactyly, as it occurs in birds, is like anisodactyly, except that the third and fourth toes (the outer and middle forward-pointing toes), or three toes, are fused together almost to their claws, as in the belted kingfisher (Megaceryle alcyon).[5] This is characteristic of Coraciiformes (kingfishers, bee-eaters, rollers, and relatives).[6]: 37 

Zygodactyly Edit

 
A green-winged macaw has raised its right foot to its beak.

Zygodactyly (from Greek ζυγος, even-numbered) is an arrangement of digits in birds and chameleons, with two toes facing forward (digits 2 and 3) and two back (digits 1 and 4). This arrangement is most common in arboreal species, particularly those that climb tree trunks or clamber through foliage. Zygodactyly occurs in the parrots, woodpeckers (including flickers), cuckoos (including roadrunners), and some owls. Zygodactyl tracks have been found dating to 120–110 million years ago (early Cretaceous), 50 million years before the first identified zygodactyl fossils. All Psittaciformes, Cuculiformes, the majority of Piciformes and the osprey are zygodactyl.[7]

Heterodactyly Edit

Heterodactyly is like zygodactyly, except that digits 3 and 4 point forward and digits 1 and 2 point back. This is found only in trogons,[8] though the enantiornithean Dalingheornis might also have had this arrangement.[9]

Pamprodactyly Edit

Pamprodactyly is an arrangement in which all four toes point forward, outer toes (toe 1 and sometimes 4) often if not regularly reversible. It is a characteristic of swifts (Apodidae) and mousebirds (Coliiformes).[6]: 37–38 

Chameleons Edit

The feet of chameleons are organized into bundles of a group of two and a group of three digits which oppose one another to grasp branches in a pincer-like arrangement. This condition has been called zygodactyly or didactyly, but the specific arrangement in chameleons does not fit either definition. The feet of the front limbs in chameleons, for instance, are organized into a medial bundle of digits 1, 2 and 3, and a lateral bundle of digits 4 and 5, while the feet of the hind limbs are organized into a medial bundle of digits 1 and 2, and a lateral bundle of digits 3, 4 and 5.[10] On the other hand, zygodactyly involves digits 1 and 4 opposing digits 2 and 3, which is an arrangement that chameleons do not exhibit in either front or hind limbs.

Aquatic tetrapods Edit

In many secondarily aquatic vertebrates, the non-bony tissues of the forelimbs and/or hindlimbs are fused into a single flipper. Some remnant of each digit generally remains under the soft tissue of the flipper, though digit reduction gradually occurs such as in baleen whales (mysticeti).[11] Marine mammals evolving flippers represents a classic example of convergent evolution, and by some analyses, parallel evolution.[12]

Full webbing of the digits in the manus and/or pes is present in a number of aquatic tetrapods. Such animals include marine mammals (cetaceans, sirenians, and pinnipeds), marine reptiles (modern sea turtles and extinct ichthyosaurs, mosasaurs, plesiosaurs, metriorhynchids), and flightless aquatic birds such as penguins.[13] Hyperphalangy, or an increase in the number of phalanges beyond ancestral mammal and reptile conditions, is present in modern cetaceans and extinct marine reptiles.[14]

Schizodactyly Edit

Schizodactyly is a primate term for grasping and clinging with the second and third digit, instead of the thumb and second digit.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Stephen Jay Gould. . Archived from the original on 2011-08-05. Retrieved 2015-10-02.
  2. ^ Solounias, Nikos; Danowitz, Melinda; Stachtiaris, Elizabeth; Khurana, Abhilasha; Araim, Marwan; Sayegh, Marc; Natale, Jessica (2018). "The evolution and anatomy of the horse manus with an emphasis on digit reduction". Royal Society Open Science. 5 (1): 171782. doi:10.1098/rsos.171782. PMC 5792948. PMID 29410871.
  3. ^ Witton, Mark (2013). Pterosaurs: Natural History, Evolution, Anatomy. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691150611.
  4. ^ József Zákány; Catherine Fromental-Ramain; Xavier Warot & Denis Duboule (1997). "Regulation of number and size of digits by posterior Hox genes: A dose-dependent mechanism with potential evolutionary implications". PNAS. 94 (25): 13695–13700. Bibcode:1997PNAS...9413695Z. doi:10.1073/pnas.94.25.13695. PMC 28368. PMID 9391088.
  5. ^ Dudley, Ron (14 February 2016). "Belted Kingfisher With A Fish (plus an interesting foot adaptation)". FeatheredPhotography. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  6. ^ a b Nupen, Lisa (September–October 2016). "Fancy Footwork: The Dazzling Diversity of Avian Feet" (PDF). African Birdlife. Vol. 4, no. 6. BirdLife South Africa. pp. 34–38. ISSN 2305-042X. Retrieved 4 December 2022 – via FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology.
  7. ^ Lockley, Martin G.; Li, Rihui; Harris, Jerald D.; Matsukawa, Masaki; Liu, Mingwei (2007). "Earliest zygodactyl bird feet: evidence from Early Cretaceous roadrunner-like tracks" (PDF). Naturwissenschaften. 94 (8): 657–665. Bibcode:2007NW.....94..657L. doi:10.1007/s00114-007-0239-x. PMID 17387416. S2CID 15821251.
  8. ^ Botelho, João Francisco; Smith-Paredes, Daniel; Nuñez-Leon, Daniel; Soto-Acuña, Sergio; Vargas, Alexander O. (2014-08-07). "The developmental origin of zygodactyl feet and its possible loss in the evolution of Passeriformes". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences. 281 (1788): 20140765. doi:10.1098/rspb.2014.0765. ISSN 0962-8452. PMC 4083792. PMID 24966313.
  9. ^ Zhang, Z.; Hou, L.; Hasegawa, Y.; O'Connor, J.; Martin, L.D.; Chiappe, L.M. (2006). "The first Mesozoic heterodactyl bird from China". Acta Geologica Sinica. 80 (5): 631–635.
  10. ^ Anderson, Christopher V. & Higham, Timothy E. (2014). "Chameleon anatomy". In Tolley, Krystal A. & Herrel, Anthony (eds.). The Biology of Chameleons. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 7–55. ISBN 9780520276055.
  11. ^ Cooper, Lisa Noelle; Berta, Annalisa; Dawson, Susan D.; Reidenberg, Joy S. (2007). "Evolution of hyperphalangy and digit reduction in the cetacean manus". Anatomical Record. 290 (6): 654–672. doi:10.1002/ar.20532. ISSN 1932-8486. PMID 17516431. S2CID 14586607.
  12. ^ Chikina, Maria; Robinson, Joseph D.; Clark, Nathan L. (2016-09-01). "Hundreds of Genes Experienced Convergent Shifts in Selective Pressure in Marine Mammals". Molecular Biology and Evolution. 33 (9): 2182–2192. doi:10.1093/molbev/msw112. ISSN 0737-4038. PMC 5854031. PMID 27329977.
  13. ^ Fish, F.E. (2004). "Structure and Mechanics of Nonpiscine Control Surfaces". IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering. 29 (3): 605–621. Bibcode:2004IJOE...29..605F. doi:10.1109/joe.2004.833213. ISSN 0364-9059. S2CID 28802495.
  14. ^ Fedak, Tim J; Hall, Brian K (2004). "Perspectives on hyperphalangy: patterns and processes". Journal of Anatomy. 204 (3): 151–163. doi:10.1111/j.0021-8782.2004.00278.x. ISSN 0021-8782. PMC 1571266. PMID 15032905.

External links Edit

  • Coates, Michael (25 April 2005). "Why do most species have five digits on their hands and feet?". Scientific American. Retrieved 2009-07-05.

dactyly, confused, with, dactyl, poetry, biology, dactyly, arrangement, digits, fingers, toes, hands, feet, sometimes, wings, tetrapod, animal, comes, from, greek, word, δακτυλος, dáktylos, finger, human, hand, anatomy, pentadactyl, sometimes, ending, dactylia. Not to be confused with Dactyl poetry In biology dactyly is the arrangement of digits fingers and toes on the hands feet or sometimes wings of a tetrapod animal It comes from the Greek word daktylos daktylos finger Human hand anatomy pentadactyl Sometimes the ending dactylia is used The derived adjectives end with dactyl or dactylous Contents 1 As a normal feature 1 1 Pentadactyly 1 2 Tetradactyly 1 3 Tridactyly 1 4 Didactyly 1 5 Monodactyly 2 As a congenital defect 2 1 Syndactyly 2 2 Polydactyly 2 3 Oligodactyly 2 3 1 Ectrodactyly 2 4 Clinodactyly 3 In birds 3 1 Anisodactyly 3 2 Syndactyly 3 3 Zygodactyly 3 4 Heterodactyly 3 5 Pamprodactyly 4 Chameleons 5 Aquatic tetrapods 6 Schizodactyly 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksAs a normal feature EditPentadactyly Edit Pentadactyly from Greek pente pente five is the condition of having five digits on each limb It is traditionally believed that all living tetrapods are descended from an ancestor with a pentadactyl limb although many species have now lost or transformed some or all of their digits by the process of evolution However this viewpoint was challenged by Stephen Jay Gould in his 1991 essay Eight Or Fewer Little Piggies where he pointed out polydactyly in early tetrapods and described the specializations of digit reduction 1 Despite the individual variations listed below the relationship is to the original five digit model In reptiles the limbs are pentadactylous Dogs and cats have tetradactylous paws but the dewclaw makes them pentadactyls Tetradactyly Edit Tetradactyly from Greek tetra tetra four is the condition of having four digits on a limb as in many birds amphibians and theropod dinosaurs Tridactyly Edit nbsp Tridactylous Allosaurus armTridactyly from Greek tria tria three is the condition of having three digits on a limb as in the rhinoceros and ancestors of the horse such as Protohippus and Hipparion These all belong to the Perissodactyla Some birds also have three toes including emus bustards and quail Didactyly Edit Didactyly from Greek di di two or bidactyly is the condition of having two digits on each limb as in the Hypertragulidae and two toed sloth Choloepus didactylus In humans this name is used for an abnormality in which the middle digits are missing leaving only the thumb and fifth finger or big and little toes Cloven hoofed mammals such as deer sheep and cattle Artiodactyla have only two digits as do ostriches Monodactyly Edit Monodactyly from Greek monos monos one is the condition of having a single digit on a limb as in modern horses and other equidae though one study suggests that the frog might be composed of remnants of digits II and IV rendering horses as not truly monodactyl 2 as well as sthenurine kangaroos Functional monodactyly where the weight is supported on only one of multiple toes can also occur as in the theropod dinosaur Vespersaurus The pterosaur Nyctosaurus retained only the wing finger on the forelimb rendering it also partially monodactyl 3 As a congenital defect EditAmong humans the term five fingered hand is sometimes used to mean the abnormality of having five fingers none of which is a thumb citation needed Syndactyly Edit Main article Syndactyly nbsp Human foot with partial simple syndactyly Syndactyly from Greek syn syn together is a condition where two or more digits are fused together It occurs normally in some mammals such as the siamang and most diprotodontid marsupials such as kangaroos It occurs as an unusual condition in humans Polydactyly Edit Main article Polydactyly Polydactyly from Greek poly poly many is when a limb has more than the usual number of digits This can be As a result of congenital abnormality in a normally pentadactyl animal Polydactyly is very common among domestic cats For more information see polydactyly Polydactyly in early tetrapod aquatic animals such as in Acanthostega gunnari Jarvik 1952 one of an increasing number of genera of stem tetrapods known from the Upper Devonian which are providing insights into the appearance of tetrapods and the origin of limbs with digits It also occurs secondarily in some later tetrapods such as ichthyosaurs The use of a term normally reserved for congenital defects reflects that it was regarded as an anomaly at the time as it was believed that all modern tetrapods have either five digits or ancestors that did Oligodactyly Edit Main article Oligodactyly Oligodactyly from Greek ὀligo oligo few is having too few digits when not caused by an amputation It is sometimes incorrectly called hypodactyly or confused with aphalangia the absence of the phalanx bone on one or commonly more digits When all the digits on a hand or foot are absent it is referred to as adactyly 4 Ectrodactyly Edit Main article Ectrodactyly Ectrodactyly also known as split hand malformation is the congenital absence of one or more central digits of the hands and feet Consequently it is a form of oligodactyly News anchor Bree Walker is probably the best known person with this condition which affects about one in 91 000 people citation needed It is conspicuously more common in the Vadoma in Zimbabwe Clinodactyly Edit Main article Clinodactyly Clinodactyly is a medical term describing the curvature of a digit a finger or toe in the plane of the palm most commonly the fifth finger the little finger towards the adjacent fourth finger the ring finger It is a fairly common isolated anomaly which often goes unnoticed but also occurs in combination with other abnormalities in certain genetic syndromes such as Down syndrome Turner syndrome and Cornelia de Lange syndrome In birds EditMain articles Bird anatomy and Bird feet and legs nbsp Four types of bird feet right foot diagrams Anisodactyly Edit Anisodactyly is the most common arrangement of digits in birds with three toes forward and one back This is common in songbirds and other perching birds as well as hunting birds such as eagles hawks and falcons This arrangement of digits help with perching and or climbing and clinging This occurs in Passeriformes Columbiformes Falconiformes Accipitriformes Galliformes and a majority of other birds Syndactyly Edit Syndactyly as it occurs in birds is like anisodactyly except that the third and fourth toes the outer and middle forward pointing toes or three toes are fused together almost to their claws as in the belted kingfisher Megaceryle alcyon 5 This is characteristic of Coraciiformes kingfishers bee eaters rollers and relatives 6 37 Zygodactyly Edit nbsp A green winged macaw has raised its right foot to its beak Zygodactyly from Greek zygos even numbered is an arrangement of digits in birds and chameleons with two toes facing forward digits 2 and 3 and two back digits 1 and 4 This arrangement is most common in arboreal species particularly those that climb tree trunks or clamber through foliage Zygodactyly occurs in the parrots woodpeckers including flickers cuckoos including roadrunners and some owls Zygodactyl tracks have been found dating to 120 110 million years ago early Cretaceous 50 million years before the first identified zygodactyl fossils All Psittaciformes Cuculiformes the majority of Piciformes and the osprey are zygodactyl 7 Heterodactyly Edit Heterodactyly is like zygodactyly except that digits 3 and 4 point forward and digits 1 and 2 point back This is found only in trogons 8 though the enantiornithean Dalingheornis might also have had this arrangement 9 Pamprodactyly Edit Pamprodactyly is an arrangement in which all four toes point forward outer toes toe 1 and sometimes 4 often if not regularly reversible It is a characteristic of swifts Apodidae and mousebirds Coliiformes 6 37 38 Chameleons EditThe feet of chameleons are organized into bundles of a group of two and a group of three digits which oppose one another to grasp branches in a pincer like arrangement This condition has been called zygodactyly or didactyly but the specific arrangement in chameleons does not fit either definition The feet of the front limbs in chameleons for instance are organized into a medial bundle of digits 1 2 and 3 and a lateral bundle of digits 4 and 5 while the feet of the hind limbs are organized into a medial bundle of digits 1 and 2 and a lateral bundle of digits 3 4 and 5 10 On the other hand zygodactyly involves digits 1 and 4 opposing digits 2 and 3 which is an arrangement that chameleons do not exhibit in either front or hind limbs Aquatic tetrapods EditIn many secondarily aquatic vertebrates the non bony tissues of the forelimbs and or hindlimbs are fused into a single flipper Some remnant of each digit generally remains under the soft tissue of the flipper though digit reduction gradually occurs such as in baleen whales mysticeti 11 Marine mammals evolving flippers represents a classic example of convergent evolution and by some analyses parallel evolution 12 Full webbing of the digits in the manus and or pes is present in a number of aquatic tetrapods Such animals include marine mammals cetaceans sirenians and pinnipeds marine reptiles modern sea turtles and extinct ichthyosaurs mosasaurs plesiosaurs metriorhynchids and flightless aquatic birds such as penguins 13 Hyperphalangy or an increase in the number of phalanges beyond ancestral mammal and reptile conditions is present in modern cetaceans and extinct marine reptiles 14 Schizodactyly EditSchizodactyly is a primate term for grasping and clinging with the second and third digit instead of the thumb and second digit See also EditArtiodactyl even toed ungulates clade Cetartiodactyla Perissodactyl odd toed ungulatesReferences Edit Stephen Jay Gould Stephen Jay Gould Eight or Fewer Little Piggies 1991 Archived from the original on 2011 08 05 Retrieved 2015 10 02 Solounias Nikos Danowitz Melinda Stachtiaris Elizabeth Khurana Abhilasha Araim Marwan Sayegh Marc Natale Jessica 2018 The evolution and anatomy of the horse manus with an emphasis on digit reduction Royal Society Open Science 5 1 171782 doi 10 1098 rsos 171782 PMC 5792948 PMID 29410871 Witton Mark 2013 Pterosaurs Natural History Evolution Anatomy Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691150611 Jozsef Zakany Catherine Fromental Ramain Xavier Warot amp Denis Duboule 1997 Regulation of number and size of digits by posterior Hox genes A dose dependent mechanism with potential evolutionary implications PNAS 94 25 13695 13700 Bibcode 1997PNAS 9413695Z doi 10 1073 pnas 94 25 13695 PMC 28368 PMID 9391088 Dudley Ron 14 February 2016 Belted Kingfisher With A Fish plus an interesting foot adaptation FeatheredPhotography Retrieved 4 December 2022 a b Nupen Lisa September October 2016 Fancy Footwork The Dazzling Diversity of Avian Feet PDF African Birdlife Vol 4 no 6 BirdLife South Africa pp 34 38 ISSN 2305 042X Retrieved 4 December 2022 via FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology Lockley Martin G Li Rihui Harris Jerald D Matsukawa Masaki Liu Mingwei 2007 Earliest zygodactyl bird feet evidence from Early Cretaceous roadrunner like tracks PDF Naturwissenschaften 94 8 657 665 Bibcode 2007NW 94 657L doi 10 1007 s00114 007 0239 x PMID 17387416 S2CID 15821251 Botelho Joao Francisco Smith Paredes Daniel Nunez Leon Daniel Soto Acuna Sergio Vargas Alexander O 2014 08 07 The developmental origin of zygodactyl feet and its possible loss in the evolution of Passeriformes Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B Biological Sciences 281 1788 20140765 doi 10 1098 rspb 2014 0765 ISSN 0962 8452 PMC 4083792 PMID 24966313 Zhang Z Hou L Hasegawa Y O Connor J Martin L D Chiappe L M 2006 The first Mesozoic heterodactyl bird from China Acta Geologica Sinica 80 5 631 635 Anderson Christopher V amp Higham Timothy E 2014 Chameleon anatomy In Tolley Krystal A amp Herrel Anthony eds The Biology of Chameleons Berkeley University of California Press pp 7 55 ISBN 9780520276055 Cooper Lisa Noelle Berta Annalisa Dawson Susan D Reidenberg Joy S 2007 Evolution of hyperphalangy and digit reduction in the cetacean manus Anatomical Record 290 6 654 672 doi 10 1002 ar 20532 ISSN 1932 8486 PMID 17516431 S2CID 14586607 Chikina Maria Robinson Joseph D Clark Nathan L 2016 09 01 Hundreds of Genes Experienced Convergent Shifts in Selective Pressure in Marine Mammals Molecular Biology and Evolution 33 9 2182 2192 doi 10 1093 molbev msw112 ISSN 0737 4038 PMC 5854031 PMID 27329977 Fish F E 2004 Structure and Mechanics of Nonpiscine Control Surfaces IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering 29 3 605 621 Bibcode 2004IJOE 29 605F doi 10 1109 joe 2004 833213 ISSN 0364 9059 S2CID 28802495 Fedak Tim J Hall Brian K 2004 Perspectives on hyperphalangy patterns and processes Journal of Anatomy 204 3 151 163 doi 10 1111 j 0021 8782 2004 00278 x ISSN 0021 8782 PMC 1571266 PMID 15032905 External links EditCoates Michael 25 April 2005 Why do most species have five digits on their hands and feet Scientific American Retrieved 2009 07 05 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dactyly amp oldid 1179631768, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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