Reference
Taylor, Michael Alan (1999) Funtional Significane of Bone Ballastin in the Evolution of Buoyancy Control Strategies by Aquatic Tetrapods; Historical Biology, 14, pp.15-31
Funtional Significane of Bone Ballastin in the Evolution of Buoyancy Control Strategies by Aquatic Tetrapods
Principal Author
Michael Alan Taylor
Header
Academic paper
Journal
Historical Biology
Volume
14
Pages
15-31
Abstract
The primary function of pachyostosis, pachyosteosclerosis, and osteosclerosis may be to act as ballast, not so much (as previously suggested) to neutralise the buoyancy of existing lungs, but to allow enlargement of the lungs. Enlarged lungs cause an animal to lose buoyancy more rapidly with depth. They also provide a larger oxygen store. These features are useful for slow swimmers and shallow divers, such as feeders on benthic plants and invertebrates. Examples are sirenians, primitive sauropterygians (,~nothosaurs"), placodonts, and the sea otter Enhydra. These last two show convergent evolution of adaptations to feeding on hard-shelled invertebrate prey in shallow water. Mesosaurids are problematical. Bone ballast uses body mass and volume less efficiently than other buoyancy control strategies. Theoretical analysis predicts that bone ballast should not occur in semiaquatic forms, fast swimmers or deep divers. lt does not usually occur in such organisms. Marine iguanas of the Galäpagos, desmostylians, and the aquatic sloth Thalassocnus are all littoral feeders and all lack bone ballast as predicted. Plesiosaurs adopted varied strategies: some used bone ballast, and others used gastroliths. Biomechanical considerations lead to the prediction that a new marine tetrapod dade will typically evolve bone ballast as part of its adaptation to life in water. Slow swimmers and grazers on sessile food, like sirenians and placodonts, develop it more strongly, but active predators like ichthyosaurs and cetaceans secondarily lose this character.
Language
English