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Comparative cranial morphology in living and extinct platypuses: Feeding behavior, electroreception, and loss of teeth.


ABSTRACT: The modern platypus, Ornithorhynchus anatinus, has an eye structure similar to aquatic mammals; however, platypuses also have a "sixth sense" associated with the bill electro- and mechanoreception that they use without opening their eyes underwater. We hypothesize that Ornithorhynchus and the Miocene taxon Obdurodon have different sensory capacities, which may have resulted from differences in foraging behavior. To estimate differences in foraging, sensory systems, and anatomical divergence between these monotremes, we compared their skull morphologies. Results indicate that the bill of Obdurodon is more dorsally deflected than that of Ornithorhynchus, suggesting a pelagic foraging behavior in Obdurodon compared to the bottom-feeding behavior in Ornithorhynchus. The infraorbital foramen of Obdurodon, through which the maxillary nerve passes sensory data from the bill to the brain, is relatively less developed than that of Ornithorhynchus. Whereas bill-focused sensory perception was likely shared among Mesozoic monotremes, the highly developed electrosensory system of Ornithorhynchus may represent an adaptation to foraging in cloudy water. Computed tomography imagery indicates that the enlarged infraorbital canal of Ornithorhynchus restricts the space available for maxillary tooth roots. Hence, loss of functional teeth in Ornithorhynchus may possibly have resulted from a shift in foraging behavior and coordinate elaboration of the electroreceptive sensory system. Well-developed electroreceptivity in monotremes is known at least as far back as the early Cretaceous; however, there are differences in the extent of elaboration of the feature among members of the ornithorhynchid lineage.

SUBMITTER: Asahara M 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5061491 | biostudies-literature | 2016 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Comparative cranial morphology in living and extinct platypuses: Feeding behavior, electroreception, and loss of teeth.

Asahara Masakazu M   Koizumi Masahiro M   Macrini Thomas E TE   Hand Suzanne J SJ   Archer Michael M  

Science advances 20161012 10


The modern platypus, <i>Ornithorhynchus anatinus</i>, has an eye structure similar to aquatic mammals; however, platypuses also have a "sixth sense" associated with the bill electro- and mechanoreception that they use without opening their eyes underwater. We hypothesize that <i>Ornithorhynchus</i> and the Miocene taxon <i>Obdurodon</i> have different sensory capacities, which may have resulted from differences in foraging behavior. To estimate differences in foraging, sensory systems, and anato  ...[more]

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