4.2 Article

In the jaws of a titan: 3D comparative anatomy of the mandibles of the Canary giant lizards (Gallotiinae: Gallotia)

Journal

HISTORICAL BIOLOGY
Volume 35, Issue 6, Pages 1052-1068

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/08912963.2022.2077107

Keywords

Comparative morphology; ontogeny; palaeoherpetology; Lacertidae; endemism; Canary Archipelago

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This study provides a detailed description of the mandibular bone characteristics of the endemic lizard genus Gallotia in the Canary Islands. It proposes identification characteristics for different species and ontogenetic stages, and explores their evolution, distribution, and migratory patterns. Understanding the intra- and interspecific variability of the mandible is crucial for assessing paleobiodiversity, studying individual developmental changes, establishing specific identification features, and conducting computational biomechanics studies based on 3D models.
An iconic, insular, endemic genus of lizards (Gallotia) is present on the Canary Islands (Spain), comprising gigantic to smaller-sized species. Despite numerous studies on various biological aspects of this genus, the osteological knowledge available is scarce. This makes it difficult to identify to species level the bone remains recovered from both living and extinct taxa, which is essential to understanding the evolution of this genus through time, its distribution and its migratory patterns. Herein, a detailed description, comparison and discussion of each mandibular bone of all the living giant species and the fossil taxon G. goliath is presented. First detailed descriptions of G. intermedia and G. bravoana are presented, and interspecific and ontogenetic characters to be considered for Gallotia and related taxa in future works are proposed. Disentangling the intra- and interspecific variability of the mandible, as well as its ontogenetic changes through time, is of special interest for a variety of reasons. These include: a) to evaluate paleobiodiversity; b) to evaluate intraspecific variation and ontogenetic changes; c) to establish mandibular characters for specific identification; d) as previous step in performing computational biomechanics studies based on 3D models to shed in-depth light on feeding ecology.

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