How sloths evolved their unique neck skeleton
October 19th, 2010 - 4:47 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Oct 19 (ANI): Scientists at the University of Cambridge have found how sloths evolved their unique neck skeleton.
From mice to giraffes, mammals are remarkable in that all but a handful of their 5000 species have exactly seven vertebrae in the neck. Among the few that deviate from this number are three-toed sloths, which may have up to ten ribless vertebrae in the neck.
Traditionally, vertebrae above the shoulders that lack ribs are known as cervical or neck vertebrae. Animals such as birds and lizards show great variety in the number of vertebrae in their neck. For example, a swan may have twice as many as a songbird.
Mammals, on the other hand, are much more conservative. A giraffe has the same number of neck vertebrae as a human, mouse, elephant, or armadillo; all have exactly seven. Sloths are an exception, with up to 10 vertebrae in their neck.
In order to discover if patterns of bone formation in these strange animals give any clues to their divergent vertebral anatomy, scientists based at the University of Cambridge have investigated the development of the skeleton in mammals, focusing on the vertebral column in sloths.
The scientists found that in all mammals except for sloths, bone formation always took place earlier in the body of first few vertebrae of the ribcage than in the neck.
The only exception was among three-toed sloths, which show early bone-formation in the bodies of their distal, ribless neck vertebrae, before those of the ribcage.
However, by observing the position of bone-formation within the vertebral column, the investigators made a startling discovery: all mammals, including sloths, show early development of the body of the eighth vertebra down from the head, whether or not it is part of the neck.
In other words, the bottom neck vertebrae of sloths show a similar sequence of development as the top ribcage vertebrae of other mammals, both of which start at eight vertebrae down from the head. This shows that the bottom “neck” vertebrae of sloths are developmentally the same as ribcage vertebrae of other mammals, but lack ribs.
“The remarkable conservatism of the mammalian neck is apparent even in those few species that superficially seem to be exceptions, like sloths. Even though they’ve got eight to ten ribless vertebrae above the shoulders, unlike the seven of giraffes, humans, and nearly every other species of mammal, those extra few are actually ribcage vertebrae masquerading as neck vertebrae,” Dr Robert Asher, of the Department of Zoology at the University of Cambridge, said. (ANI)
- Why giraffes have long necks - Jul 08, 2010
- Remains of 10,000-year-old giant sloth found - Oct 30, 2011
- Europe's biggest dinosaur skull found in Spain - Apr 04, 2012
- Math formula proves giraffes can swim, but not very well - Jun 01, 2010
- Newly discovered species of dinosaur bridges gap in dinosaur family tree - Apr 13, 2011
- Scientists warn that one-fifth of the species are going to slide to extinction - Oct 27, 2010
- Blame backbone fractures on evolution, not osteoporosis - Oct 20, 2011
- Molecular decay of enamel-specific gene in toothless mammals supports theory of evolution - Sep 04, 2009
- Prehistoric whale skeletons found in Egypt - Jul 10, 2010
- Palaeontologists describe plant-eating dinosaur - May 27, 2010
- Mammal populations dip by up to 59pc in Africa's national parks - Jul 13, 2010
- Two million year old skeletons discovered - Nov 18, 2011
- Use of nitrates increases bone strength: study - Feb 23, 2011
- Genetic clues to evolution of jaws in vertebrates discovered - Sep 25, 2010
- A fifth of world's life at extinction risk - Oct 27, 2010
Tags: armadillo, bone formation, elephant, giraffe, handful, investigators, lizards, mammals, mice, neck vertebrae, ribcage, ribs, skeleton, startling discovery, strange animals, three toed sloths, university of cambridge, vertebra, vertebral anatomy, vertebral column