Letting the ‘cat’ out of the bag: Pouch young development of the extinct Tasmanian tiger revealed by X-ray computed tomography

Journal article


Newton, Axel H., Spoutil, Frantisek, Prochazka, Jan, Black, Jay R., Medlock, Kathryn, Paddle, Robert N., Knitlova, Marketa, Hipsley, Christy A. and Pask, Andrew J.. (2018). Letting the ‘cat’ out of the bag: Pouch young development of the extinct Tasmanian tiger revealed by X-ray computed tomography. Royal Society Open Science. 5(2), pp. 1 - 19. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.171914
AuthorsNewton, Axel H., Spoutil, Frantisek, Prochazka, Jan, Black, Jay R., Medlock, Kathryn, Paddle, Robert N., Knitlova, Marketa, Hipsley, Christy A. and Pask, Andrew J.
Abstract

The Tasmanian tiger or thylacine (Thylacinus cynocephalus) was an iconic Australian marsupial predator that was hunted to extinction in the early 1900s. Despite sharing striking similarities with canids, they failed to evolve many of the specialized anatomical features that characterize carnivorous placental mammals. These evolutionary limitations are thought to arise from functional constraints associated with the marsupial mode of reproduction, in which otherwise highly altricial young use their well-developed forelimbs to climb to the pouch and mouth to suckle. Here we present the first three-dimensional digital developmental series of the thylacine throughout its pouch life using X-ray computed tomography on all known ethanol-preserved specimens. Based on detailed skeletal measurements, we refine the species growth curve to improve age estimates for the individuals. Comparison of allometric growth trends in the appendicular skeleton (fore- and hindlimbs) with that of other placental and marsupial mammals revealed that despite their unique adult morphologies, thylacines retained a generalized early marsupial ontogeny. Our approach also revealed mislabelled specimens that possessed large epipubic bones (vestigial in thylacine) and differing vertebral numbers. All of our generated CT models are publicly available, preserving their developmental morphology and providing a novel digital resource for future studies of this unique marsupial.

Year2018
JournalRoyal Society Open Science
Journal citation5 (2), pp. 1 - 19
PublisherRoyal Society Publishing
ISSN2054-5703
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.171914
Scopus EID2-s2.0-85043496771
Open accessOpen access
Page range1 - 19
Publisher's version
License
Place of publicationUnited Kingdom
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