Journal article

Evolution of the sauropodomorph astragalus: relationships with the emergence of the sauropod bauplan and weight-bearing function, and critical appraisal of evolutionary rate estimation

DOKPE

  • 2025
Published in:
  • Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. - Oxford Academic. - 2025, vol. 204, no. 4
English Sauropods, the largest terrestrial animals, were a clade of quadrupedal dinosaurs nested within sauropodomorphs, whose early representatives were small bipeds. Their evolution towards gigantism was associated with acquisition of specialized features, notably the columnar limbs. However, their tarsus, mainly represented by the astragalus, has received little attention despite its crucial position and role in limb architecture. We aim to quantify the three-dimensional shape of a large sample of sauropodomorph astragali to assess how its morphology evolved through time and with the emergence of the sauropod bauplan. Acquisition of sauropod-related features was stepwise, congruently with previous results for the hindlimb zeugopod, with marked distinction and diversification of the eusauropod subclade. Size-related variations were congruent with weight-bearing constraints, with flatter distal articular surfaces and more tightly interlocked proximal ones. The subhorizontal pes organization in eusauropods is comparable to that in elephants, suggesting a link with the evolution of an extensive foot pad in both groups. Our evolutionary rates analysis could appear to support this hypothesis. However, our randomization procedure showed that our test was highly sensitive to temporal uncertainties. Our case study therefore encourages acknowledgement of sensitivity in phylogenetically informed palaeobiological analyses to assess more robustly the degree of confidence to put on subsequent interpretations.
Faculty
Faculté des sciences et de médecine
Department
Département de Biologie
Language
  • English
Classification
Zoology
License
CC BY
Open access status
green
Identifiers
Persistent URL
https://folia.unifr.ch/unifr/documents/332896
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