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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Pentadactyl manus of the Metoposaurus krasiejowensis from the Late Triassic of Poland, the first record of pentadactyly among Temnospondyli

Elżbieta M. TeschnerP. Martin SanderDorota Konietzko-meierDorota Konietzko-meierAdam Bodzioch

subject

0301 basic medicineHistologyManusMetoposaurusAmphibians03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemanusTemnospondyliMetoposaurusForelimbmedicineAnimalsdigitsMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenybiologyOssificationFossilsTemnospondyliCell BiologyAnatomyPhalanxbiology.organism_classificationOriginal PapersBiological EvolutionNumerical digitossification030104 developmental biologyGeographyOriginal ArticlePolandAnatomymedicine.symptom030217 neurology & neurosurgeryDevelopmental Biology

description

Abstract Temnospondyli are commonly believed to have possessed four digits in the manus and five in the pes. However, actual finds of articulated autopodia are extremely rare. Therefore, an articulated, slightly incomplete forelimb skeleton with preserved manus of Metoposaurus krasiejowensis from the Late Triassic of Poland is important in providing new details about the structure and ossification sequence in the temnospondyl limb. The most important observation is the presence of five metacarpals in this specimen. This allows reconstructing the manus as pentadactyl. The number of phalanges and the distribution of distal articulation facets allow reconstruction of the digit formula as (2?)‐3‐3‐(3?)‐(2?). The well‐developed fifth digit suggests that the Metoposaurus manus shows a unique ossification sequence: the reduction or late ossification of the first digit conforms to the amniote‐frog pattern, and the early development of the second and third digit makes M etoposaurus similar to salamanders. Based on the distribution of pentadactyly vs. tetradactyly in the temnospondyl manus, the number of digits was not phylogenetically constrained in temnospondyls, similar to today's amphibians.

10.1111/joa.13276http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC7704227