Salamander-like development in a seymouriamorph revealed by palaeohistology

Biol Lett. 2008 Aug 23;4(4):411-4. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2008.0159.

Abstract

The amniotes generally lay eggs on land and are thereby differentiated from lissamphibians (salamanders, frogs and caecilians) by their developmental pattern. Although a number of 330-300-Myr old fossils are regarded as early tetrapods placed close to amniotes on the basis of anatomical data, we still do not know whether their developmental pattern was more similar to those of lissamphibians or amniotes. Here we report palaeohistological and skeletochronological evidence supporting a salamander-like development in the seymouriamorph Discosauriscus. Its long-bone growth pattern, slow diaphyseal growth rate and delayed sexual maturity (at more than 10 years old) are more comparable with growth features of extant salamanders rather than extant amniotes, even though they are mostly hypothesized to be phylogenetically closer to living amniotes than salamanders.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Biological Evolution*
  • Extremities / anatomy & histology
  • Extremities / growth & development
  • Fossils*
  • Phylogeny
  • Reptiles / anatomy & histology
  • Reptiles / growth & development*
  • Urodela / growth & development*