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null (Ed.)Extant mammals are both taxonomically and ecologically diverse, having evolved a remarkable array of locomotor ecologies (e.g., swimming, digging, and flying). Evolution of the therian-type forelimb, with a highly reduced pectoral girdle and ball-and-socket shoulder joint, has been heralded as a key innovation that enabled mammals to co-opt their forelimbs for diverse functions. The acquisition of the mammal forelimb can be traced through their forerunners, the non-mammalian synapsids (NMS), but exactly how this musculoskeletal transformation proceeded and its impact on functional diversification have not be quantitatively tested. To explore the evolution of forelimb functional diversity in synapsids, we measured shoulder joint osteological range of motion (ROM) in a range of extant amniotes (lizards, monotremes, therian mammals), and compared their patterns of joint mobility to exemplars from each of the major grades of NMS: ‘pelycosaurs’, basal therapsids, and non-mammalian cynodonts. Three-dimensional models of the shoulder girdles and humeri were digitally aligned in an anatomical ‘neutral pose’ using a semi-automated approach based on articular surface morphology. ROM was then determined for the shoulder joint using a fully automated method, where the humerus was moved in flexion-extension, adduction-abduction, and pronation-supination until bone-to-bone contact occurred. Relative degree and directionality of mobility were then compared across taxa. We find an increase in total shoulder joint ROM through synapsid evolution, suggesting that more derived NMS could perform a wider range of limb movements. However, we also see more complex trends in directionality of shoulder mobility that may be indicators of forelimb posture. Extant lepidosaurs and monotremes had the greatest ROM in abduction-adduction, whereas therians had more ROM in flexion-extension, likely related to ‘sprawling’ vs. ‘erect’ gaits. Therapsids and cynodonts both had greatest ROM in abduction-adduction, matching previous reconstructions of these taxa as sprawling to semi-erect. However, ‘pelycosaurs’ had the greatest ROM in flexion-extension, despite having abducted forelimbs, suggesting they did not move their forelimbs in same manner as modern sprawling animals. Our results demonstrate the complex nature of forelimb evolution in synapsids and provide novel insights into the functional transformation and diversification of the mammalian forelimb. Funding Sources Funding information: NSF DEB- 1757749 (S.E.P) and NSF DEB-1754502 (K.D.A).more » « less
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