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Abstract
The evolution of the mammalian jaw during the transition from non-mammalian synapsids to crown mammals is a key event in vertebrate history and characterised by the gradual reduction of its individual bones into a single element and the concomitant transformation of the jaw joint and its incorporation into the middle ear complex. This osteological transformation is accompanied by a rearrangement and modification of the jaw adductor musculature, which is thought to have allowed the evolution of a more-efficient masticatory system in comparison to the plesiomorphic synapsid condition. While osteological characters relating to this transition are well documented in the fossil record, the exact arrangement and modifications of the individual adductor muscles during the cynodont-mammaliaform transition have been debated for nearly a century. We review the existing knowledge about the musculoskeletal evolution of the mammalian jaw adductor complex and evaluate previous hypotheses in the light of recently documented fossils that represent new specimens of existing species, which are of central importance to the mammalian origins debate. By employing computed tomography (CT) and digital reconstruction techniques to create three-dimensional models of the jaw adductor musculature in a number of representative non-mammalian cynodonts and mammaliaforms, we provide an updated perspective on mammalian jaw muscle evolution. As an emerging consensus, current evidence suggests that the mammal-like division of the jaw adductor musculature (into deep and superficial components of the m. masseter, the m. temporalis and the m. pterygoideus) was completed in Eucynodontia. The arrangement of the jaw adductor musculature in a mammalian fashion, with the m. pterygoideus group inserting on the dentary was completed in basal Mammaliaformes as suggested by the muscle reconstruction of Morganucodon oehleri. Consequently, transformation of the jaw adductor musculature from the ancestral ('reptilian') to the mammalian condition must have preceded the emergence of Mammalia and the full formation of the mammalian jaw joint. This suggests that the modification of the jaw adductor system played a pivotal role in the functional morphology and biomechanical stability of the jaw joint.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 31 |
Journal | Biological Reviews |
Early online date | 23 Nov 2016 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 23 Nov 2016 |
Keywords
- Cynodontia
- Digital reconstruction
- Mammalian evolution
- Mesozoic
- Musculoskeletal evolution
- Vertebrate palaeontology
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Dive into the research topics of 'Morphological evolution of the mammalian jaw adductor complex'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Finished
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Functional evolution of the mammalian middle ear and jaw joint across the cynodont-mammaliaform transition
Rayfield, E. J. (Principal Investigator)
1/10/13 → 30/09/17
Project: Research
Profiles
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Professor Emily J Rayfield
- School of Earth Sciences - Professor of Palaeobiology
- Palaeobiology
Person: Academic , Member