The evolutionary origin of metamorphosis in tetrapods: clues from palatal osteohistology in temnospondyls

DOI

The aim of this project is to study the evolutionary origin of metamorphosis in the amphibian lineage. Lissamphibians (i.e., salamander, frogs, and caecilians) are the only extant tetrapods that metamorphose, but it is still not clear whether metamorphosis is unique of this clade or if it evolved during the Palaeozoic in their putative ancestors, the dissorophoid temnospondyls. To date, metamorphosis cannot be inferred unequivocally for this fossil group because of the lack of complete ontogenetic series. In this project, we propose to infer metamorphosis in temnospondyls in a novel way: testing whether their palatal bones show histological signals of remodelling, a process that occurs in pterygoids and vomers during metamorphosis in salamanders. To do so, we propose to study using synchrotron x-ray imaging the ontogenetic changes in cranial bones at the histological level in a range of salamander taxa with different life cycles and compare them to key temnospondyl species.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.15151/ESRF-ES-928068886
Metadata Access https://icatplus.esrf.fr/oaipmh/request?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_datacite&identifier=oai:icatplus.esrf.fr:inv/928068886
Provenance
Creator Vincent FERNANDEZ ORCID logo; Donald DAVESNE ORCID logo; Kathleen DOLLMAN ORCID logo; Anne-Claire FABRE ORCID logo; Celeste Marina PEREZ
Publisher ESRF (European Synchrotron Radiation Facility)
Publication Year 2025
Rights CC-BY-4.0; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
OpenAccess true
Representation
Resource Type Data from large facility measurement; Collection
Discipline Particles, Nuclei and Fields