Mammalian development does not recapitulate suspected key transformations in the evolutionary detachment of the mammalian middle ear

Héctor E. Ramírez-Chaves*, Stephen W. Wroe, Lynne Selwood, Lyn A. Hinds, Chris Leigh, Daisuke Koyabu, Nikolay Kardjilov, Vera Weisbecker

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

Abstract

The ectotympanic, malleus and incus of the developing mammalian middle ear (ME) are initially attached to the dentary via Meckel’s cartilage, betraying their origins from the primary jawjoint of land vertebrates. This recapitulation has prompted mostly unquantified suggestions that several suspected—but similarly unquantified—key evolutionary transformations leading to the mammalianMEare recapitulated in development, through negative allometry and posterior/medial displacement of ME bones relative to the jaw joint. Here we show, using mCT reconstructions, that neither allometric nor topological change is quantifiable in the pre-detachment ME development of six marsupials and two monotremes. Also, differential ME positioning in the two monotreme species is not recapitulated. This challenges the developmental prerequisites of widely cited evolutionary scenarios of definitive mammalian middle ear (DMME) evolution, highlighting the requirement for further fossil evidence to test these hypotheses. Possible association between rear molar eruption, full ME ossification and ME detachment in marsupials suggests functional divergence between dentary andMEas a trigger for developmental, and possibly also evolutionary, ME detachment. The stable positioning of the dentary and ME supports suggestions that a ‘partial mammalian middle ear’ as found in many mammaliaforms—probably with a cartilaginous Meckel’s cartilage—represents the only developmentally plausible evolutionary DMME precursor.
Original languageEnglish
Article number20152606
JournalProceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume283
Issue number1822
Online published13 Jan 2016
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 13 Jan 2016
Externally publishedYes

Research Keywords

  • Allometry
  • Detachment
  • Middle ear bones
  • Synapsida

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