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Patterns of growth in monitor lizards (Varanidae) as revealed by computed tomography of femoral growth plates

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Abstract

Growth plate cartilage (GPC) is responsible for the growth of long bones due to endochondral ossification, which is the main mechanism of longitudinal skeletal growth in tetrapods. Degradation of GPC is a sign of determinate growth as it arrests the growth irreversibly. By contrast, indeterminate growth requires the persistence of GPC throughout the entire life. Monitor lizards (Varanidae) were previously reported to exhibit a dual type of growth, determinate as well as indeterminate. To reinvestigate this highly unexpected finding, we examined 13 species of varanids and their close relatives (Shinisauridae and Helodermatidae). In order to visualize GPC on the proximal part of the femur, we employed micro-radiography and micro-computed tomography. In large-bodied species, an extended capability of longitudinal growth was demonstrated; GPC was preserved for most of their lives. On the other hand, GPC senescence with complete disappearance of cartilage was found in adults of small-bodied varanids. These results confirm previous finding and, together with the absence of GPC in the outgroup species, challenge the universality of indeterminate growth in squamates. Moreover, we observed disappearance of GPC in an extremely old Varanus indicus, implying that GPC degradation is not entirely absent but only delayed to senescence in this large-bodied species. These findings raise the intriguing possibility that it is the timing, rather than other underlying mechanisms, what sets apart determinate from indeterminate growth. We therefore suggest that this dual type of growth represents an extreme case of heterochrony and is a consequence of strong sexual selection pressure to large-bodied varanids.

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Acknowledgements

We thank Nataša Velenská and Ivan Rehák from Prague Zoo, Jan Konáš from Zoological and Botanical Garden Plzeň, Antonín Hnízdil from Zoologická zahrada Terárium Praha, Jiří Moravec from National Museum and Luděk Pokorný for providing the cadavers for analyses. We also thank Michal Anděl and Jana Mrzílková for providing the laboratory equipment at the Joint Laboratory of Experimental Imaging, Third Faculty of Medicine, Charles University in Prague. We are grateful to Jakub Polák and Martin Převorovský, who kindly improved the English. The project was supported by the Grant Agency of Charles University (No. 62910/2010) and Technology Agency of the Czech Republic (TA04011329).

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Correspondence to Daniel Frynta.

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Frýdlová, P., Nutilová, V., Dudák, J. et al. Patterns of growth in monitor lizards (Varanidae) as revealed by computed tomography of femoral growth plates. Zoomorphology 136, 95–106 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00435-016-0338-3

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00435-016-0338-3

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