Almost all mammals have seven vertebrae in their cervical spines. This consistency represents one of the most prominent examples of morphological stasis in vertebrae evolution. Hence, the requirements associated with evolutionary modifications of neck length have to be met with a fixed number of vertebrae. It has not been clear whether body size influences the overall length of the cervical spine and its inner organization (i.e., if the mammalian neck is subject to allometry). Here, we provide the first large-scale analysis of the scaling patterns of the cervical spine and its constituting cervical vertebrae. Our findings reveal that the opposite allometric scaling of C1 and C2–C7 accommodate the increase of neck bending moment with body si...
Constraint is a universal feature of morphological evolution. The vertebral column of synapsids (mam...
PubMedID: 10337957The shapes of cervical (C1-C7) and upper thoracic (T1, T2) vertebrae from the rat ...
Elasmosaur cervical vertebrae are common fossils, but their taxonomic utility is limited due to a la...
Abstract Background The increase in locomotor and metabolic performance during mammalian evolution w...
The neck skeleton is constituted as a highly mobile, multi-element and multi-joint kinematic chain. ...
Bird necks display unparalleled levels of morphological diversity compared to other vertebrates, yet...
Abstract Background The axial skeleton consists of repeating units (vertebrae) that are integrated t...
Background: The axial skeleton consists of repeating units (vertebrae) that are integrated through t...
Mammals flex, extend, and rotate their spines as they perform behaviors critical for survival, such ...
Vertebrae are serially homologous structures with tight integration through their evolution and deve...
Despite a diversity of about 10 000 extant species, the sophisticated avian ‘body plan’ has not much...
The mammalian neck adopts a variety of postures during daily life and generates numerous head trajec...
A fundamental concept in evolutionary biology is that life tends to become more complex through geol...
Organisms comprise multiple interacting parts, but few quantitative studies have analysed multi-elem...
Why do all mammals, except for sloths and manatees, have exactly seven cervical vertebrae? In other...
Constraint is a universal feature of morphological evolution. The vertebral column of synapsids (mam...
PubMedID: 10337957The shapes of cervical (C1-C7) and upper thoracic (T1, T2) vertebrae from the rat ...
Elasmosaur cervical vertebrae are common fossils, but their taxonomic utility is limited due to a la...
Abstract Background The increase in locomotor and metabolic performance during mammalian evolution w...
The neck skeleton is constituted as a highly mobile, multi-element and multi-joint kinematic chain. ...
Bird necks display unparalleled levels of morphological diversity compared to other vertebrates, yet...
Abstract Background The axial skeleton consists of repeating units (vertebrae) that are integrated t...
Background: The axial skeleton consists of repeating units (vertebrae) that are integrated through t...
Mammals flex, extend, and rotate their spines as they perform behaviors critical for survival, such ...
Vertebrae are serially homologous structures with tight integration through their evolution and deve...
Despite a diversity of about 10 000 extant species, the sophisticated avian ‘body plan’ has not much...
The mammalian neck adopts a variety of postures during daily life and generates numerous head trajec...
A fundamental concept in evolutionary biology is that life tends to become more complex through geol...
Organisms comprise multiple interacting parts, but few quantitative studies have analysed multi-elem...
Why do all mammals, except for sloths and manatees, have exactly seven cervical vertebrae? In other...
Constraint is a universal feature of morphological evolution. The vertebral column of synapsids (mam...
PubMedID: 10337957The shapes of cervical (C1-C7) and upper thoracic (T1, T2) vertebrae from the rat ...
Elasmosaur cervical vertebrae are common fossils, but their taxonomic utility is limited due to a la...