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Parallelism and convergence in anuran fangs

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2003

Marissa Fabrezi
Affiliation:
CONICET, Museo de Ciencias Naturales, Universidad Nacional de Salta, Mendoza 2, 4400-Salta, Argentina
Sharon B. Emerson
Affiliation:
Department of Biology, University of Utah Salt Lake City, UT 84112 U.S.A.
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Abstract

The anuran lower jaw is composed of three pairs of bones: dentaries, angulosplenials and mentomeckelians. Although the lower jaw is toothless, except in Gastrotheca guentheri, enlarged fangs or odontoids have evolved at least four times independently in some myobatrachids, hylids, ranids and leptodactylids through both parallel and convergent evolutionary events. Fangs seem to represent the single best design solution to enable an anuran to inflict a bite-like wound, but the biological role of biting varies among species. Fangs are projections of the dentaries in ranids, but in the hylid frog Hemiphractus and in ceratophryine leptodactylids, they form a sinosteotic unit with the dentaries and mentomeckelians. Comparisons of morphology, behaviour and diet among frog taxa with enlarged fangs reveal that the fangs may be the result of either sexual or natural selection. Those fangs that evolved in response to sexual selection seem to be relatively larger than those that resulted of natural selection.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2003 The Zoological Society of London

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