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1.
Curr Biol ; 33(12): R670-R674, 2023 06 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37339591

ABSTRACT

What is the vagina? This seemingly simple question has a rather complex answer, depending on whether we use a functional or a developmental definition. The terminal portion of the female reproductive tract that opens to the environment initially served as a conduit for eggs to be laid, and in species with external fertilization the distal oviduct may be specialized for oviposition but there is no vagina. In animals with internal fertilization, this terminal section of the oviduct interacts with the sperm and the intromittent organ leading to functional specialization of this region that we often call a vagina in insects and some vertebrates. Here we address the evolution, morphology and diverse functions of the vagina and some of the unknown questions that remain to be addressed in the study of this remarkable structure.


Subject(s)
Genitalia, Female , Semen , Animals , Humans , Female , Male , Genitalia, Female/anatomy & histology , Spermatozoa , Oviducts , Oviposition , Fertilization
2.
Elife ; 102021 06 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34060471

ABSTRACT

Teeth are present in most clades of vertebrates but have been lost completely several times in actinopterygian fishes and amniotes. Using phenotypic data collected from over 500 genera via micro-computed tomography, we provide the first rigorous assessment of the evolutionary history of dentition across all major lineages of amphibians. We demonstrate that dentition is invariably present in caecilians and salamanders, but teeth have been lost completely more than 20 times in frogs, a much higher occurrence of edentulism than in any other vertebrate group. The repeated loss of teeth in anurans is associated with a specialized diet of small invertebrate prey as well as shortening of the lower jaw, but it is not correlated with a reduction in body size. Frogs provide an unparalleled opportunity for investigating the molecular and developmental mechanisms of convergent tooth loss on a large phylogenetic scale.


Subject(s)
Anura/physiology , Biological Evolution , Jaw/physiology , Tooth/physiology , Adaptation, Physiological , Animals , Anura/anatomy & histology , Diet , Jaw/anatomy & histology , Jaw/diagnostic imaging , Phylogeny , Time Factors , Tooth/anatomy & histology , Tooth/diagnostic imaging , X-Ray Microtomography
3.
Biol Lett ; 16(4): 20190947, 2020 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32264782

ABSTRACT

The nearly 200 species of direct-developing frogs in the genus Eleutherodactylus (the Caribbean landfrogs, which include the coquís) comprise an important lineage for understanding the evolution and historical biogeography of the Caribbean. Time-calibrated molecular phylogenies provide indirect evidence for the processes that shaped the modern anuran fauna, but there is little direct evidence from the fossil record of Caribbean frogs about their distributions in the past. We report a distal humerus of a frog from the Oligocene (approx. 29 Ma) of Puerto Rico that represents the earliest known fossil frog from any Caribbean island. Based on its prominent rounded distal humeral head, distally projecting entepicondyle, and reduced ectepicondyle, we refer it to the genus Eleutherodactylus. This fossil provides additional support for an early arrival of some groups of terrestrial vertebrates to the Greater Antilles and corroborates previous estimates based on molecular phylogenies suggesting that this diverse Caribbean lineage was present in the islands by the mid-Cenozoic.


Subject(s)
Anura , Fossils , Animals , Islands , Puerto Rico , West Indies
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