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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Masticatory muscle architecture in a water-rat from Australasia (Murinae, Hydromys) and its implication for the evolution of carnivory in rodents.

TLDR
The jaw muscles and cranial anatomy of a carnivorous water‐rat, Hydromys chrysogaster, are described, revealing major changes in the muscle proportions among hydromys and its omnivorous close relative, Melomys.
Abstract
Murines are well known for their generalist diet, but several of them display specializations towards a carnivorous diet such as the amphibious Indo-Pacific water-rats. Despite the fact that carnivory evolved repeatedly in this group, few studies have investigated associated changes in jaw muscle anatomy and biomechanics. Here, we describe the jaw muscles and cranial anatomy of a carnivorous water-rat, Hydromys chrysogaster. The architecture of the jaw musculature of six specimens captured both on Obi and Papua were studied and described using dissections. We identified the origin and insertions of the jaw muscles, and quantified muscle mass, fiber length, physiological cross-sectional area, and muscle vectors for each muscle. Using a biomechanical model, we estimated maximum incisor and molar bite force at different gape angles. Finally, we conducted a 2D geometric morphometric analyses to compare jaw shape, mechanical potential, and diversity in lever-arm ratios for a set of 238 specimens, representative of Australo-Papuan carnivorous and omnivorous murids. Our study reveals major changes in the muscle proportions among Hydromys and its omnivorous close relative, Melomys. Hydromys was found to have large superficial masseter and temporalis muscles as well as a reduced deep masseter and zygomatico-mandibularis, highlighting major functional divergence among omnivorous and carnivorous murines. Changes in these muscles are also accompanied by changes in jaw shape and the lines of action of the muscles. A more vertically oriented masseter, reduced masseteric muscles, as well as an elongated jaw with proodont lower incisors are key features indicative of a reduced propalinality in carnivorous Hydromys. Differences in the fiber length of the masseteric muscles were also detected between Hydromys and Melomys, which highlight potential adaptations to a wide gape in Hydromys, allowing it to prey on larger animals. Using a biomechanical model, we inferred a greater bite force in Hydromys than in Melomys, implying a functional shift between omnivory and carnivory. However, Melomys has an unexpected greater bite force at large gape compared with Hydromys. Compared with omnivorous Melomys, Hydromys have a very distinctive low mandible with a well-developed coronoid process, and a reduced angular process that projects posteriorly to the ascending rami. This jaw shape, along with our mechanical potential and jaw lever ratio estimates, suggests that Hydromys has a faster jaw closing at the incisor, with a higher bite force at the level of the molars. The narrowing of the Hydromys jaw explains this higher lever advantage at the molars, which constitutes a good compromise between a wide gape, a reduced anterior masseteric mass, and long fiber lengths. Lever arms of the superficial and deep masseter are less favourable to force output of the mandible in Hydromys but more favourable to speed. Compared with the small input lever arm defined between the condyle and the angular process, the relatively longer mandible of Hydromys increases the speed at the expense of the output force. This unique combination of morphological features of the masticatory apparatus possibly has permitted Hydromys to become a highly successful amphibious predator in the Indo-Pacific region.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Rodent systematics in an age of discovery: recent advances and prospects

TL;DR: An overview of changes in the understanding of the systematics of living rodents, including species recognition and delimitation, phylogenetics, and classification, with emphasis on the last three decades is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Review of the methods used for calculating physiological cross-sectional area (PCSA) for ecological questions.

TL;DR: This review examines literature that used physiological cross‐sectional area (PCSA) as a representative measure of an individual muscle's maximal isometric force production and summarised the different approaches to collecting and recording muscle architectural properties to subsequently calculate PCSA to provide readers with an overview of repeatable methods to assess muscle architecture.
Book ChapterDOI

The Early Evolution of Biting–Chewing Performance in Hexapoda

TL;DR: The results show that at the studied systematic level, variation in mandible biting–chewing effectivity is regulated to a large extent by phylogenetic history and the configuration of the mandible joints rather than the food preference of a given taxon.
Posted ContentDOI

Australian rodents reveal conserved Cranial Evolutionary Allometry across 10 million years of murid evolution

TL;DR: 3D geometric morphometrics are used to quantify species-level and evolutionary allometries in 38 species from all Australian murid genera and suggest a strong role of stabilizing selection on the masticatory apparatus of murid rodents.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Extensions of the Procrustes Method for the Optimal Superimposition of Landmarks

TL;DR: In this paper, a new method is presented that generalizes Siegel and Benson's (1982) resistant-fit theta-rho analysis so that more than two objects can be compared at the same time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical shape analysis: clustering, learning, and testing

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Journal ArticleDOI

geomorph: an r package for the collection and analysis of geometric morphometric shape data

TL;DR: Geomorph as discussed by the authors is a software package for performing geometric morphometric shape analysis in the R statistical computing environment, where a set of shape variables are obtained from landmark coordinates following a Procrustes superimposition.
Book

Basic Biomechanics of the Musculoskeletal System

TL;DR: The Third edition of this book as mentioned in this paper presents a working knowledge of biomechanical principles for use in the evaluation and treatment of musculoskeletal dysfunction, including fracture fixation, arthroplasty, standing, sitting, and lying.
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