4.2 Article

Brachiocephalic Muscular Arrangements in Cavioid Rodents (Caviomorpha): a Functional, Anatomical, and Evolutionary Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF MAMMALIAN EVOLUTION
Volume 28, Issue 2, Pages 529-541

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10914-020-09529-2

Keywords

Myology; Brachiocephalic arrangement; Functional anatomy; Evolution; Cavioid rodents

Funding

  1. Universidad Nacional de La Plata [N865]

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This study analyzed the morphological diversity, homologies, functions, and evolutionary changes of shoulder muscles in cavioids that constitute the m. brachiocephalicus in cursorial mammals, revealing their important role in high-speed running.
In cursorial mammals, reduction or loss of the clavicle is usually associated with the constitution of the m. brachiocephalicus, a continuous muscle that extends from head and neck regions to the forelimb, protracting it during locomotion. Among caviomorph rodents, the Cavioidea are characterized by many adaptations that improve running performance, such as the presence of a brachiocephalic configuration of the mm. cleidomastoideus, cleido-occipitalis, and deltoideus pars clavicularis, a feature that was interpreted as one of the main modifications for speed in running. However, a comprehensive analysis of this muscular configuration in the Cavioidea is not yet available. In this study, we analyze the morphological diversity, homologies, functions, and evolutionary changes of those shoulder muscles in cavioids that constitute the m. brachiocephalicus in cursorial mammals. We hypothesize that a brachiocephalic muscular arrangement of these muscles has evolved in this group in relation to a swift mode of locomotion. Muscular dissections on seven species of cavioids were performed while myological data on three other species were taken from the literature. Our results indicate that all cavioids have a brachiocephalic arrangement of the mm. cleidomastoideus, cleido-occipitalis, and deltoideus pars clavicularis, whereas a second brachiocephalic arrangement constituted by the mm. omotransversarius and trapezius pars cervicalis is present only in the larger cavioids. Both muscular configurations act in protracting the forelimb during the gait, but we also hypothesize that the particular disposition of the m. omotransversarius around the shoulder joint of larger cavioids could also assist in the stabilization of this joint during fast half-bounding locomotion.

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