Open Access
Open access
Polish Polar Research, volume 35, issue 1, pages 27-39

Synsacra of the Eocene Antarctic penguins: new data on spinal maturation and an insight into their role in the control of walking

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2014-03-01
scimago Q3
SJR0.227
CiteScore2.0
Impact factor0.9
ISSN01380338, 20818262
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Ecology
Abstract

The synsacrum is an important element of the axial skeleton in birds, both volant and flightless. Little is known about the maturation of this complex bone in penguins. In this work, the supposedly ontogenetically youngest known synsacrum of early penguins was described. The analysis of this specimen, collected within the Eocene La Meseta Formation of Seymour (Marambio) Island, Antarctic Peninsula, revealed that this bird had attained at least the fledging stage of growth. Studies of three mature synsacra recovered from the same formation focused on the synsacral canals and, using indirect reasoning, their contents. These analyses revealed that the lumbosacral intumescence of the spinal cord and its extensions, the transverse canals, had been developed roughly like those in extant penguins (and also swifts and cormorants). The neural spine extensions (a non−nervous tissue) tracing the transverse grooves of the dorsal wall of the synsacral canal are currently considered as involved in the control of walking. The presented data suggest that such a sense organ gained its current penguin configuration by the late Eocene.

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