Land
animals exhibit a continuum of limb postures – ranging from 'sprawled', with
the limbs held out to the side of the body, like lizards, to 'upright' or
'erect', with the limbs held beneath the body and close to the animal's
midline, like dogs, cats and horses. Upright posture is characteristic of most
modern mammals, but when did this key trait evolve? Credit: Peter Bishop
Mammals,
including humans, stand out with their distinctively upright posture, a key
trait that fueled their spectacular evolutionary success. Yet, the earliest
known ancestors of modern mammals more resembled reptiles, with limbs stuck out
to their sides in a sprawled posture.
The shift from a sprawled stance, like
that of lizards, to the upright posture of modern mammals, as in humans, dogs, and
horses, marked a pivotal moment in evolution.
It involved a major reorganization of
limb anatomy and function in synapsids—the group that includes both mammals and
their non-mammalian ancestors—eventually leading to the therian mammals
(marsupials and placentals) we know today. Despite over a century of study, the
exact "how," "why," and "when" behind this
evolutionary leap has remained elusive.
Now, in a study published in Science Advances, Harvard
researchers provide new insights into this mystery, revealing the shift from a
sprawled to upright posture in mammals was anything but straightforward.
Using cutting-edge methods that blend fossil data with advanced biomechanical modeling, the
researchers found that this transition was surprisingly complex and nonlinear,
and occurred much later than previously believed.
Lead author Dr. Peter Bishop, a postdoctoral fellow, and senior author Professor Stephanie Pierce, both in the Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology at Harvard, began by examining the biomechanics of five modern species that represent the full spectrum of limb postures, including a tegu lizard (sprawled), an alligator (semi-upright), and a greyhound (upright).
Fossil
of the early sail-backed synapsid Dimetrodon, from 290 million years ago, one
of the species investigated in the study. Credit: Christina Byrd. Museum of
Comparative Zoology, President and Fellows of Harvard College.
"By
first studying these modern species, we greatly improved our understanding of
how an animal's anatomy relates to the way it stands and moves," said
Bishop. "We could then put it into an evolutionary context of how posture
and gait actually changed from early synapsids through to modern mammals."
The researchers extended their analysis
to eight exemplary fossil species from four continents spanning 300 million
years of evolution. The species ranged from the 35g proto-mammal Megazostrodon
to the 88kg Ophiacodon, and included iconic animals like the sail-backed
Dimetrodon and the saber-toothed predator Lycaenops.
Using principles from physics and
engineering, Bishop and Pierce built digital biomechanical models of how the
muscles and bones attached to each other. These models allowed them to generate
simulations that determined how much force the hindlimbs (back legs) could
apply on the ground.
"The amount of force that a limb can apply to the ground is a critical determinant of locomotor performance in animals," said Bishop. "If you cannot produce sufficient force in a given direction when it's needed, you won't be able to run as fast, turn as quickly, or worse still, you could well fall over."
The study involved digitizing the fossil
skeletons of extinct synapsids, creating digital biomechanical models of the
musculoskeletal system of the hindlimb, and using these models to compute the
limb's ability to apply force on the ground in different directions. The result
is a three-dimensional 'feasible force space', which describes what the limb is
capable of achieving during locomotion. Credit: Peter Bishop
The computer simulations produced a three-dimensional "feasible
force space" that captures a limb's overall functional performance.
"Computing feasible force spaces implicitly accounts for all the
interactions that can occur between muscles, joints and bones throughout a
limb," said Pierce.
"This gives us a clearer view
of the bigger picture, a more holistic view of limb function and locomotion and
how it evolved over hundreds of millions of years."
While the concept of a feasible
force space (developed by biomedical engineers) has been around since the
1990s, this study is the first to apply it to the fossil record to understand
how extinct animals once moved.
The authors packaged the
simulations into new "fossil-friendly" computational tools that can
aid other paleontologists in exploring their own questions. These tools could
also help engineers design better bio-inspired robots that can navigate complex
or unstable terrain.
The study revealed several important "signals" of locomotion, including that the overall force-generating ability in the modern species was maximal around the postures that each species used in their daily behavior. Importantly, this meant that Bishop and Pierce could be confident that the results obtained for the extinct species genuinely reflected how they stood and moved when alive.
Fossil
of the mammal-like cynodont Massetognathus, from 242 million years ago, one of
the species investigated in the study. Credit: Peter Bishop. Museum of
Comparative Zoology, President and Fellows of Harvard College.
After
analyzing the extinct species, the researchers discovered that locomotor
performance peaked and dipped over millions of years, rather than progressing
in a simple, linear fashion from sprawling to upright.
Some extinct species also appeared to be
more flexible—able to shift back and forth between more sprawled or more
upright postures, like modern alligators and crocodiles do. While others showed
a strong reversal towards more sprawled postures before mammals evolved.
Paired with the study's other results,
this indicated that the traits associated with upright posture in today's
mammals evolved much later than previously thought, most likely close to the
common ancestor of therians.
These findings also help reconcile
several unresolved problems in the fossil record. For example, it explains the persistence of
asymmetric hands, feet, and limb joints in many mammal ancestors, traits
typically associated with sprawling postures among modern animals.
It can also help explain why fossils of
early mammal ancestors are frequently found in a squashed, spread-eagle pose—a
pose more likely to be achieved with sprawled limbs, while modern placental and
marsupial fossils are typically found lying on their sides.
"It is very gratifying as a scientist, when one set of results can help illuminate other observations, moving us closer to a more comprehensive understanding," Bishop said.
Evolutionary
interrelationships of the modern (black silhouettes) and extinct (gray
silhouettes) species investigated. The study revealed a complex history of
posture evolution in synapsids, and that a fully 'upright' posture typical of
modern placentals and marsupials was late to evolve. Credit: Peter Bishop
Pierce,
whose lab has studied the evolution of the mammalian body plan for nearly a
decade, notes that these findings are consistent with patterns seen in other
parts of the synapsid body, like the vertebral column.
"The picture is emerging that the
full complement of quintessentially therian traits was assembled over a complex
and prolonged period, with the full suite attained relatively late in synapsid
history," she said.
Beyond mammals, the study suggests that
some major evolutionary transitions, like the shift to an upright posture, were
often complex and potentially influenced by chance events. For instance, the
strong reversal in synapsid posture, back toward more sprawled poses, appears
to coincide with the Permian-Triassic mass extinction—when 90% of life was
wiped out.
This extinction event led to other
groups like the dinosaurs becoming the dominant animal groups on land, pushing
synapsids back into the shadows. The researchers speculate that due to this
"ecological marginalization," the evolutionary trajectory of
synapsids may have changed so much that it altered the way they moved.
Whether this hypothesis turns out to be
supported or not, understanding the evolution of mammal posture
has long been a complex puzzle. Pierce emphasized how advances in computing
power and digital modeling have provided scientists new perspectives to address
these ancient mysteries.
"Using these new techniques with ancient fossils allows us to have a better perspective of how these animals evolved, and that it wasn't just this simple, linear evolutionary story," she said. "It was really complicated and these animals were probably living and moving in their environments in ways that we hadn't appreciated before. There was a lot happening and mammals today are really quite special."
Source: Study reveals the twists and turns of mammal evolution from a sprawling to upright posture
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