International audienceEvolution involves interplay between natural selection and developmental constraints(1-3). This is seen, for example, when digits are lost from the limbs during evolution(1,3,4). Extant archosaurs (crocodiles and birds) show several instances of digit loss(3,5,6) under different selective regimes, and show limbs with one, two, three, four or the ancestral number of five digits. The `lost' digits sometimes persist for millions of years as developmental vestiges(7-10). Here we examine digit loss in the Nile crocodile and five birds, using markers of three successive stages of digit development. In two independent lineages under different selection, wing digit I and all its markers disappear. In contrast, hindlimb digit V...
Background: Comparative morphology identifies the digits of the wing of birds as 1,2 and 3, but they...
SUMMARY A highly conserved spatio-temporal pattern of cartilage formation reveals that the digits of...
Extracted text; Change in digit number, particularly digit loss, has occurred repeatedly over the ev...
International audienceEvolution involves interplay between natural selection and developmental const...
It is widely accepted that birds are a subgroup of dinosaurs, but there is an apparent conflict: mod...
The frameshift hypothesis is a widely accepted model of bird wing evolution. This hypothesis postula...
<p>The forelimb and hind limbs of representative taxa illustrate the history of digit morphology in ...
Evolutionary simplification of autopodial structures is a major theme in studies of body‐form evolut...
_Limusaurus_ is a remarkable herbivorous ceratosaur unique among theropods in having digits II, III ...
Evolutionary simplification of autopodial structures is a major theme in studies of body-form evolut...
Digit identity in the avian wing is a classical example of conflicting anatomical and embryological ...
Evolutionary changes in the number of digits and other limb elements appear to be severely constrain...
The frameshift hypothesis is a widely-accepted model of bird wing evolution. This hypothesis postula...
Our knowledge of limb development has increased dramatically in the last decades. However, our under...
Digit identity in the avian wing is a classical example of conflicting anatomical and embryological...
Background: Comparative morphology identifies the digits of the wing of birds as 1,2 and 3, but they...
SUMMARY A highly conserved spatio-temporal pattern of cartilage formation reveals that the digits of...
Extracted text; Change in digit number, particularly digit loss, has occurred repeatedly over the ev...
International audienceEvolution involves interplay between natural selection and developmental const...
It is widely accepted that birds are a subgroup of dinosaurs, but there is an apparent conflict: mod...
The frameshift hypothesis is a widely accepted model of bird wing evolution. This hypothesis postula...
<p>The forelimb and hind limbs of representative taxa illustrate the history of digit morphology in ...
Evolutionary simplification of autopodial structures is a major theme in studies of body‐form evolut...
_Limusaurus_ is a remarkable herbivorous ceratosaur unique among theropods in having digits II, III ...
Evolutionary simplification of autopodial structures is a major theme in studies of body-form evolut...
Digit identity in the avian wing is a classical example of conflicting anatomical and embryological ...
Evolutionary changes in the number of digits and other limb elements appear to be severely constrain...
The frameshift hypothesis is a widely-accepted model of bird wing evolution. This hypothesis postula...
Our knowledge of limb development has increased dramatically in the last decades. However, our under...
Digit identity in the avian wing is a classical example of conflicting anatomical and embryological...
Background: Comparative morphology identifies the digits of the wing of birds as 1,2 and 3, but they...
SUMMARY A highly conserved spatio-temporal pattern of cartilage formation reveals that the digits of...
Extracted text; Change in digit number, particularly digit loss, has occurred repeatedly over the ev...