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Postparietal

Postparietals are cranial bones present in fish and many tetrapods. Although initially a pair of bones, many lineages possess postparietals which were fused into a single bone. The postparietals were dermal bones situated along the midline of the skull, behind the parietal bones. They formed part of the rear edge of the skull roof, and the lateral edge of each postparietal often contacts the tabular and supratemporal bones. In fish, the postparietals are elongated, typically the largest components of the skull roof. Tetrapods possessed shorter postparietals, which were reduced further and shifted towards the braincase in amniotes.[1] At several points in synapsid evolution, the postparietals fused to each other and the tabulars during embryological development. This fusion produces the interparietal bone, which is inherited by mammals.[2] Postparietals are common in extinct amphibians and early reptiles. However, most living amphibians (of the group Lissamphibia) and living reptiles (of the group Sauria) lack postparietal bones, with a few exceptions.[2]

The skull of Xenotosuchus, a temnospondyl amphibian. Postparietals are in deep pink, at the back of the skull

Evolution edit

Fish and amphibians edit

 
The skull of a bowfin (Amia calva), one of the most basal living actinopterygiians. Skull bones are labelled based on tetrapod homologies.

Watson & Day (1916)'s "orthodox" interpretation of fish skulls argued that fish lacked independent postparietals, with the elongated paired midline bones at the back of the skull being interpreted as parietals. On the other hand, Westoll (1938) proposed an alternative interpretation which identified the bones as postparietals based on comparisons between early tetrapods and their sarcopterygian ancestors. This latter interpretation has usurped the "orthodox" interpretation and is currently more widespread among paleontologists Although the generally large size of fish postparietals are inconsistent with the smaller postparietals of tetrapods, there are many factors supporting the identification of the large posterior midline elements as postparietals, rather than parietals. These include their contact with tabulars and supratemporals, the fact that they are positioned behind the bones which surround the parietal foramen (i.e. the parietal bones), and how transitional taxa show apparent homology with tetrapod postparietals and the large posterior midline elements of fish. Studies of Ichthyostega, Elpistostege, and Edops in particular have demonstrated this concept. One objection to this interpretation is that the single midline postparietal of Ichthyostega has a transverse bend of the lateral line, which in fish typically occurs on extrascapular elements (plates at the back of the skull formed from enlarged neck scales). Proponents of the "orthodox" interpretation used this to argue that the unpaired postparietal of Icthyostega is a modified extrascapular element not homologous to what they identify as the "parietals" of fish. However, this is more easily explained by a simple shift in the position of the lateral line, as the postparietals of Icthyostega are otherwise identical in proportion and position (and therefore considered homologous) to the large paired posterior midline elements of fish.[3][1][4]

Many sarcopterygian fish (including living coelocanths) possess a large, robust plate at the back of the skull known as a postparietal shield. This plate consists mostly of the large postparietals along its midline, with smaller tabular bones and one or more supratemporal bones along its edge. The postparietal shield often articulates with the rest of the skull through a mobile joint. As sarcopterygians acquire more derived features and eventually evolve into tetrapods, the postparietals gradually shrink, losing their status as the largest midline elements of the skull and allowing the more anteriorly-situated parietal bones (and the newly acquired frontal bones) to acquire that status. The postparietals also becomes more solidly attached to the parietals. Most lissamphibians lack postparietals, with the exception of a few anurans such as Pelates (spadefoot toads) and Bombina (fire-bellied toads).[2] In diadectomorphs, the postparietals fuse to each other. The seymouriamorph Discosauriscus has a high degree of interspecific variation in regards to postparietal fusion; they may either fuse with each other, not at all, or with the adjacent tabulars but not with each other.[5] Closer to the base of amniotes, the postparietal shifts from the dorsal portion of the skull to the occipital (braincase) portion, sloping downwards in the process.

Synapsids edit

 
The skull of Dimetrodon (an early synapsid with a single midline postparietal) in occipital view.

Early synapsids inherited postparietals (sometimes paired) from their non-amniote ancestors. Embryological data indicates that the interparietal bone of mammals forms from the fusion of four bones during early development: a pair of medial neural crest elements edged by lateral mesoderm elements. The medial neural crest-derived pair are considered homologous to the postparietals of other vertebrates, while the lateral mesoderm bones are considered homologous to the tabular bones. In almost all mammals, all four bones are fused to each other by the time of birth, and in many cases they additionally fuse to the parietal and supraoccipital in adulthood. Many non-mammalian synapsids have three bones in the interparietal region as adults: one midline bone and two lateral bones. In these situations, the midline bone (often also termed an interparietal) is a fused postparietal while the lateral bones are tabulars. Independently-derived fusion between paired postparietals and/or the adjacent tabulars is common among synapsids, meaning that many different lineages have one, three, or four bones in the region which makes up the mammalian interparietal. In rare cases there are two interparietal bones, formed when left and right postparietals each fuse to their corresponding tabular, but not each other.[2]

Reptiles edit

The postparietals continue to shrink and move further back in the skull in reptiles, no longer forming any contribution to the ceiling of the brain cavity. Small paired or fused postparietals are common in Permian parareptiles and eureptiles, including early diapsids such as Petrolacosaurus and Youngina. Postparietals were subsequently lost at the base of Sauria, the expansive diapsid subgroup containing all living species of reptiles. Archosauriforms (and their sister taxon Tasmaniosaurus) briefly reacquired postparietals in the form of a single fused bone. As in synapsids, this bone has sometimes been termed an interparietal. Proterosuchids, erythrosuchids, euparkeriids, and Asperoris are all known to have possessed interparietals, while the bone was absent in proterochampsids, Doswellia, Vancleavea, Litorosuchus, most or all phytosaurs, and archosaurs.[6] The only true archosaur generally considered to possess an interparietal as an adult is a single specimen of Gracilisuchus.[7] Paired postparietals have also been observed in Alligator mississippiensis embryos, although they are incorporated into the supraoccipital by the time of hatching.[8] One proposal used developmental data to argue that the "parietal" of birds was actually derived from postparietals.[9] However, subsequent review provided evidence against that hypothesis by demonstrating that birds had inherited a consistent relationship between the skull roof and brain cavity; this relationship excluded the postparietals from the brain cavity (at least in reptiles) and supported the traditional interpretation that the parietal of birds was homologous to that of other reptiles.[7]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Panchen, A. L.; Smithson, T. R. (1987). "Character Diagnosis, Fossils and the Origin of Tetrapods". Biological Reviews. 62 (4): 341–436. doi:10.1111/j.1469-185X.1987.tb01635.x. ISSN 1469-185X. S2CID 83672017.
  2. ^ a b c d Koyabu, Daisuke; Maier, Wolfgang; Sánchez-Villagra, Marcelo R. (2012-08-28). "Paleontological and developmental evidence resolve the homology and dual embryonic origin of a mammalian skull bone, the interparietal" (PDF). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 109 (35): 14075–14080. Bibcode:2012PNAS..10914075K. doi:10.1073/pnas.1208693109. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 3435230. PMID 22891324.
  3. ^ Parrington, F. R. (1967-10-01). "The identification of the dermal bones of the head". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 47 (311): 231–239. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.1967.tb01406.x. ISSN 0024-4082.
  4. ^ Ahlberg, Per Erik (1991-11-01). "A re-examination of sarcopterygian interrelationships, with special reference to the Porolepiformes". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 103 (3): 241–287. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.1991.tb00905.x. ISSN 0024-4082.
  5. ^ Klembara, Jozef (1995-01-01). "Some cases of fused and concrescentexocranial bones in the Lower Permian seymouriamorph Tetrapod Discosauriscus Kuhn; 1933". Geobios. Premiers Vertandébrandés et Vertandébrandés Infandérieurs. 28: 263–267. doi:10.1016/S0016-6995(95)80124-3. ISSN 0016-6995.
  6. ^ Ezcurra, Martín D. (2016-04-28). "The phylogenetic relationships of basal archosauromorphs, with an emphasis on the systematics of proterosuchian archosauriforms". PeerJ. 4: e1778. doi:10.7717/peerj.1778. ISSN 2167-8359. PMC 4860341. PMID 27162705.
  7. ^ a b Fabbri, Matteo; Mongiardino Koch, Nicolás; Pritchard, Adam C.; Hanson, Michael; Hoffman, Eva; Bever, Gabriel S.; Balanoff, Amy M.; Morris, Zachary S.; Field, Daniel J.; Camacho, Jasmin; Rowe, Timothy B. (11 September 2017). "The skull roof tracks the brain during the evolution and development of reptiles including birds". Nature Ecology & Evolution. 1 (10): 1543–1550. doi:10.1038/s41559-017-0288-2. ISSN 2397-334X. PMID 29185519. S2CID 3326766.
  8. ^ Klembara, Jozef (2001). "Postparietal and prehatching ontogeny of the supraoccipital in Alligator mississippiensis (Archosauria, Crocodylia)". Journal of Morphology. 249 (2): 147–153. doi:10.1002/jmor.1046. ISSN 1097-4687. PMID 11466742. S2CID 22370661.
  9. ^ Maddin, Hillary C.; Piekarski, Nadine; Sefton, Elizabeth M.; Hanken, James (2016). "Homology of the cranial vault in birds: new insights based on embryonic fate-mapping and character analysis". Royal Society Open Science. 3 (8): 160356. Bibcode:2016RSOS....360356M. doi:10.1098/rsos.160356. PMC 5108967. PMID 27853617.

postparietal, cranial, bones, present, fish, many, tetrapods, although, initially, pair, bones, many, lineages, possess, postparietals, which, were, fused, into, single, bone, postparietals, were, dermal, bones, situated, along, midline, skull, behind, parieta. Postparietals are cranial bones present in fish and many tetrapods Although initially a pair of bones many lineages possess postparietals which were fused into a single bone The postparietals were dermal bones situated along the midline of the skull behind the parietal bones They formed part of the rear edge of the skull roof and the lateral edge of each postparietal often contacts the tabular and supratemporal bones In fish the postparietals are elongated typically the largest components of the skull roof Tetrapods possessed shorter postparietals which were reduced further and shifted towards the braincase in amniotes 1 At several points in synapsid evolution the postparietals fused to each other and the tabulars during embryological development This fusion produces the interparietal bone which is inherited by mammals 2 Postparietals are common in extinct amphibians and early reptiles However most living amphibians of the group Lissamphibia and living reptiles of the group Sauria lack postparietal bones with a few exceptions 2 The skull of Xenotosuchus a temnospondyl amphibian Postparietals are in deep pink at the back of the skull Contents 1 Evolution 1 1 Fish and amphibians 1 2 Synapsids 1 3 Reptiles 2 ReferencesEvolution editFish and amphibians edit nbsp The skull of a bowfin Amia calva one of the most basal living actinopterygiians Skull bones are labelled based on tetrapod homologies Watson amp Day 1916 s orthodox interpretation of fish skulls argued that fish lacked independent postparietals with the elongated paired midline bones at the back of the skull being interpreted as parietals On the other hand Westoll 1938 proposed an alternative interpretation which identified the bones as postparietals based on comparisons between early tetrapods and their sarcopterygian ancestors This latter interpretation has usurped the orthodox interpretation and is currently more widespread among paleontologists Although the generally large size of fish postparietals are inconsistent with the smaller postparietals of tetrapods there are many factors supporting the identification of the large posterior midline elements as postparietals rather than parietals These include their contact with tabulars and supratemporals the fact that they are positioned behind the bones which surround the parietal foramen i e the parietal bones and how transitional taxa show apparent homology with tetrapod postparietals and the large posterior midline elements of fish Studies of Ichthyostega Elpistostege and Edops in particular have demonstrated this concept One objection to this interpretation is that the single midline postparietal of Ichthyostega has a transverse bend of the lateral line which in fish typically occurs on extrascapular elements plates at the back of the skull formed from enlarged neck scales Proponents of the orthodox interpretation used this to argue that the unpaired postparietal of Icthyostega is a modified extrascapular element not homologous to what they identify as the parietals of fish However this is more easily explained by a simple shift in the position of the lateral line as the postparietals of Icthyostega are otherwise identical in proportion and position and therefore considered homologous to the large paired posterior midline elements of fish 3 1 4 Many sarcopterygian fish including living coelocanths possess a large robust plate at the back of the skull known as a postparietal shield This plate consists mostly of the large postparietals along its midline with smaller tabular bones and one or more supratemporal bones along its edge The postparietal shield often articulates with the rest of the skull through a mobile joint As sarcopterygians acquire more derived features and eventually evolve into tetrapods the postparietals gradually shrink losing their status as the largest midline elements of the skull and allowing the more anteriorly situated parietal bones and the newly acquired frontal bones to acquire that status The postparietals also becomes more solidly attached to the parietals Most lissamphibians lack postparietals with the exception of a few anurans such as Pelates spadefoot toads and Bombina fire bellied toads 2 In diadectomorphs the postparietals fuse to each other The seymouriamorph Discosauriscus has a high degree of interspecific variation in regards to postparietal fusion they may either fuse with each other not at all or with the adjacent tabulars but not with each other 5 Closer to the base of amniotes the postparietal shifts from the dorsal portion of the skull to the occipital braincase portion sloping downwards in the process Synapsids edit nbsp The skull of Dimetrodon an early synapsid with a single midline postparietal in occipital view Early synapsids inherited postparietals sometimes paired from their non amniote ancestors Embryological data indicates that the interparietal bone of mammals forms from the fusion of four bones during early development a pair of medial neural crest elements edged by lateral mesoderm elements The medial neural crest derived pair are considered homologous to the postparietals of other vertebrates while the lateral mesoderm bones are considered homologous to the tabular bones In almost all mammals all four bones are fused to each other by the time of birth and in many cases they additionally fuse to the parietal and supraoccipital in adulthood Many non mammalian synapsids have three bones in the interparietal region as adults one midline bone and two lateral bones In these situations the midline bone often also termed an interparietal is a fused postparietal while the lateral bones are tabulars Independently derived fusion between paired postparietals and or the adjacent tabulars is common among synapsids meaning that many different lineages have one three or four bones in the region which makes up the mammalian interparietal In rare cases there are two interparietal bones formed when left and right postparietals each fuse to their corresponding tabular but not each other 2 Reptiles edit The postparietals continue to shrink and move further back in the skull in reptiles no longer forming any contribution to the ceiling of the brain cavity Small paired or fused postparietals are common in Permian parareptiles and eureptiles including early diapsids such as Petrolacosaurus and Youngina Postparietals were subsequently lost at the base of Sauria the expansive diapsid subgroup containing all living species of reptiles Archosauriforms and their sister taxon Tasmaniosaurus briefly reacquired postparietals in the form of a single fused bone As in synapsids this bone has sometimes been termed an interparietal Proterosuchids erythrosuchids euparkeriids and Asperoris are all known to have possessed interparietals while the bone was absent in proterochampsids Doswellia Vancleavea Litorosuchus most or all phytosaurs and archosaurs 6 The only true archosaur generally considered to possess an interparietal as an adult is a single specimen of Gracilisuchus 7 Paired postparietals have also been observed in Alligator mississippiensis embryos although they are incorporated into the supraoccipital by the time of hatching 8 One proposal used developmental data to argue that the parietal of birds was actually derived from postparietals 9 However subsequent review provided evidence against that hypothesis by demonstrating that birds had inherited a consistent relationship between the skull roof and brain cavity this relationship excluded the postparietals from the brain cavity at least in reptiles and supported the traditional interpretation that the parietal of birds was homologous to that of other reptiles 7 References edit a b Panchen A L Smithson T R 1987 Character Diagnosis Fossils and the Origin of Tetrapods Biological Reviews 62 4 341 436 doi 10 1111 j 1469 185X 1987 tb01635 x ISSN 1469 185X S2CID 83672017 a b c d Koyabu Daisuke Maier Wolfgang Sanchez Villagra Marcelo R 2012 08 28 Paleontological and developmental evidence resolve the homology and dual embryonic origin of a mammalian skull bone the interparietal PDF Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 109 35 14075 14080 Bibcode 2012PNAS 10914075K doi 10 1073 pnas 1208693109 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 3435230 PMID 22891324 Parrington F R 1967 10 01 The identification of the dermal bones of the head Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 47 311 231 239 doi 10 1111 j 1096 3642 1967 tb01406 x ISSN 0024 4082 Ahlberg Per Erik 1991 11 01 A re examination of sarcopterygian interrelationships with special reference to the Porolepiformes Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 103 3 241 287 doi 10 1111 j 1096 3642 1991 tb00905 x ISSN 0024 4082 Klembara Jozef 1995 01 01 Some cases of fused and concrescentexocranial bones in the Lower Permian seymouriamorph Tetrapod Discosauriscus Kuhn 1933 Geobios Premiers Vertandebrandes et Vertandebrandes Infanderieurs 28 263 267 doi 10 1016 S0016 6995 95 80124 3 ISSN 0016 6995 Ezcurra Martin D 2016 04 28 The phylogenetic relationships of basal archosauromorphs with an emphasis on the systematics of proterosuchian archosauriforms PeerJ 4 e1778 doi 10 7717 peerj 1778 ISSN 2167 8359 PMC 4860341 PMID 27162705 a b Fabbri Matteo Mongiardino Koch Nicolas Pritchard Adam C Hanson Michael Hoffman Eva Bever Gabriel S Balanoff Amy M Morris Zachary S Field Daniel J Camacho Jasmin Rowe Timothy B 11 September 2017 The skull roof tracks the brain during the evolution and development of reptiles including birds Nature Ecology amp Evolution 1 10 1543 1550 doi 10 1038 s41559 017 0288 2 ISSN 2397 334X PMID 29185519 S2CID 3326766 Klembara Jozef 2001 Postparietal and prehatching ontogeny of the supraoccipital in Alligator mississippiensis Archosauria Crocodylia Journal of Morphology 249 2 147 153 doi 10 1002 jmor 1046 ISSN 1097 4687 PMID 11466742 S2CID 22370661 Maddin Hillary C Piekarski Nadine Sefton Elizabeth M Hanken James 2016 Homology of the cranial vault in birds new insights based on embryonic fate mapping and character analysis Royal Society Open Science 3 8 160356 Bibcode 2016RSOS 360356M doi 10 1098 rsos 160356 PMC 5108967 PMID 27853617 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Postparietal amp oldid 1188097780, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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