Bone Histology of Fossil Tetrapods: Advancing Methods, Analysis, and Interpretation

Bone Histology of Fossil Tetrapods: Advancing Methods, Analysis, and Interpretation

Bone Histology of Fossil Tetrapods: Advancing Methods, Analysis, and Interpretation

Bone Histology of Fossil Tetrapods: Advancing Methods, Analysis, and Interpretation

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Overview

The microscopic examination of fossilized bone tissue is a sophisticated and increasingly important analytical tool for understanding the life history of ancient organisms. This book provides an essential primer and manual for using fossil bone histology to investigate the biology of extinct tetrapods. Twelve experts summarize advances in the field over the past three decades, reviewing fundamental basics of bone microanatomy and physiology. Research specimen selection, thin-section preparation, and data analysis are addressed in detail. The authors also outline methods and issues in bone growth rate calculation and chronological age determination, as well as how to examine broader questions of behavior, ecology, and evolution by studying the microstructure of bone.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780520955110
Publisher: University of California Press
Publication date: 03/19/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 298
File size: 35 MB
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About the Author

Kevin Padian is Professor of Integrative Biology at the University of California, Berkeley and Curator at the UC Museum of Paleontology. Ellen-Thérèse Lamm is Histology Laboratory Manager at the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman, Montana.

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Bone Histology of Fossil Tetrapods

Advancing Methods, Analysis, and Interpretation


By Kevin Padian, Ellen-Thérèse Lamm

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS

Copyright © 2013 The Regents of the University of California
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-520-95511-0



CHAPTER 1

Why Study the Bone Microstructure of Fossil Tetrapods?

Kevin Padian


In the nineteenth century, when morphology was the queen of the biological sciences, every student of the living world had to know the intimate details of plant and animal anatomy, including microscopic anatomy, as well as the theories of the generation and determination of form and structure that underpinned the science of morphology (Sloan 1992; Desmond 1982, 1989). As a matter of routine, Richard Owen took a thin section of a bone of Scelidosaurus when he described the dinosaur in 1861. However, with the twentieth-century advent of genetics, and later the great advances in cellular and molecular biology, histology—the study of tissues—was eclipsed by these many new fields of study. There simply was not enough time for everything. Besides, in this new world order, histology was regarded as old-fashioned; it wasn't telling us anything new or anything more than human anatomy was. People had to learn these subjects in order to do medicine or surgery or functional morphology, and then they needed to move on to more active fields. In fact, the analysis of the microscopic structure of fossil bone was never a huge field. We think of pioneers such as Quekett, Gross, Foote, Ørvig, Enlow, Peabody, de Ricqlès, and Reid in the field of fossil tetrapod bone histology, but we do not always realize that they were usually rather lonely.

Although fossil bones have been sectioned for centuries, they have never been systematically sampled until recently. By "systematically," we mean not only phylogenetically but also in the sense of having an explicit, standard approach to sampling with the goal of identifying and controlling as many variables in your sample as possible. A simple illustration will show how much and how quickly things have changed. In the 1960s, when Armand de Ricqlès was assembling his samples for his dissertation, which ultimately became the great series of works that he published in Annales de Paléontologie in the 1960s and 1970s, curators of museum collections were reticent to give him perfectly good bones to sacrifice to the saw. Generally, he was able to work with incomplete or fragmentary bones, occasionally with dubious identifications of element and taxon. So it was very difficult for him to standardize his samples and control his variables. Nevertheless, he managed to induce a series of generalizations about patterns of bone growth strategies in tetrapods that in its general outlines and many of its details holds up very well nearly half a century later (Padian 2011).

Paleohistologists have historically faced this main problem: an adventitious, capricious sample set. It was only in the 1980s and 1990s, when John R. ("Jack") Horner and contemporaries became interested in what paleohistology could tell us about the ages and growth rates of dinosaurs, that samples could be adequately standardized. The reason was that Jack collected his own dinosaurs, mostly from the Cretaceous of Montana. As Curator of Paleontology at the Museum of the Rockies, he was able not only to cut up whatever he wanted but also to standardize his sections so that he could get a range of sizes and ages of specimens, always sampling the same bone in the same place. Along with pioneering studies by Anusuya Chinsamy and others, Jack, Armand, and their students and colleagues were soon applying the same approaches to a great many extinct amphibians, reptiles, and birds. Jack employed a full-time technician to process thin sections of fossil and recent bones. The burgeoning of this field and the great insights that it has given us into the paleobiology of dinosaurs and other fossil vertebrates are the main reasons for this book.


THE "FOUR SIGNALS" OF FOSSIL BONE HISTOLOGY

The microscopic structure of fossil bone generally reveals four influences or "signals" (Horner et al. 1999, 2000; de Ricqlès et al. 2001; Padian et al. 2001). These are ontogeny, phylogeny, mechanics, and environment. These signals hold sway to different degrees in different bones in different taxa at different times of life, as well as in different environments. Reading these signals requires comparative information; without it, inferences about age, growth rate, and other factors can be mistaken. And it is important to note from the start that more than one of these signals can be manifested synergistically in any given section of bone tissue.


Ontogeny

As a bone grows, it changes its histological features in several ways. Cartilaginous or fibrous precursors are replaced by bone. Internal medullary cavities expand, eroding away previous bone, while new periosteal bone is deposited on the outer surfaces. The growth rate of bone tissue drops as the bone develops, along with the number and size of blood vessels and (often) the number of bone cells. Older vascular canals fill with deposited bone, and new (secondary) generations of canals may riddle the older cortex. Remodeling of the original cortical bone by trabecular bone, endosteal bone, or some combination of tissues may take place, especially in the perimedullary region. After longitudinal growth of the bone has effectively ceased, the bone may continue to accumulate periosteal tissue slowly, and this may give the surface of the bone shaft a smooth appearance, while some trochanters and joint ends may become gnarly and rugose, with a quite different appearance than they had while actively growing.

The rate at which a bone is growing at any given time is usually the principal determinant of many of these other histological features. This generalization is called Amprino's Rule, after the insight of Rodolfo Amprino (1947). He recognized that the form of the bone tissue itself—notably, the number, size, and orientation of its vascular canals—changed throughout growth. Because the vascular canals are responsible for so much of the nutrition of a bone, it follows that greater vascularization permits higher growth rates. These change in predictable ways through ontogeny. Soon after a tetrapod is born or hatched, its growth rate begins to increase. This manifests itself in two ways: Linear growth follows an asymptotic curve in most tetrapods (the misleading term "determinate" growth; see Chapters 7–9), while mass increase follows one of a family of logistic growth curves. Generally speaking, growth rate is highest when an individual is young, and it tapers gradually toward the "adult" stage, where it may plateau entirely. Here we make a distinction between a sexually mature "adult" and a skeletally mature "adult" in which growth has effectively reached its near-maximum, or asymptote. These events are emphatically not coincident in most tetrapods (Figure 7.6). (See Figure 1 1.)


Phylogeny

It is a truism that you are what you inherit, and in this sense organisms inherit the vast majority of features from their ancestors. Yet "descent with modification" is the most basic definition of evolution. As organisms evolve from their ancestors, their sizes, habitats, metabolic processes, growth rates, and adaptations are all modified—and bone tissues reflect all of these changes. However, it is also true that the types of bone tissues expressed in skeletons, though primarily reflecting the processes and rates of ontogeny, generally "hang together" along the lines of phylogenetic groups. That is to say, small lizard species tend to grow more in the manner of larger lizard species than in the manner of small dinosaur species, because they inherit the rates of metabolism and growth that control the expression of bone tissue from common ancestors. As a result, we can generally tell "lizard bone" from "dinosaur bone," given homologous elements. But there is a phylogenetic gradation, as much as there is an ontogenetic gradation, in the types of bone tissues expressed in the skeleton. Through the branches of a phylogeny, various features of bone—including vascular density, osteocyte density, the types of vascular canals, the compactness of tissue, and the rate of deposition—may change phylogenetically. The phylogenetic "signal" in bone is persistent, but it is never the strongest signal. It is mainly a reminder that related animals do not vary capriciously in the expression of their bone tissues, and the reason is that inherited patterns are persistent.


Mechanics

There are various definitions of Wolff's Law, named for the nineteenth-century German anatomist Julius Wolff, but they generally denote the generalization that the mechanical load on a bone will shape its form, including its internal structure. We call this the mechanical signal in bone histology. This can be studied in the course of an individual's lifetime, among individuals in a population, or among species that are phylogenetically related or ecologically similar in their mechanical needs. Forces of torsion, which are especially experienced by flying animals, and forces of compression, which are heightened in diving aquatic animals, cause significant departures from the histological features of more "typical" terrestrial relatives. Increased loading may cause a bone tissue to grow with a more compact form or to remodel itself more extensively, which can be indicated by an influx of secondary osteons. Emmanuel de Margerie (2002, 2006) found that the wings of birds tend to produce a predominance of the "laminar" form of fibro-lamellar bone tissue. This configuration presumably helps the bone to resist the torsion that the forces of flapping place on it. Armand de Ricqlès et al. (2000) noted a similar pattern in the wing bones of pterosaurs: The tissues grow in a sort of "plywood" pattern so that the bone fibers of successive layers are oriented at angles to each other, presumably also for strengthening purposes.

In the same way, aquatic tetrapods tend to have denser, more compact bones with thicker walls in which the medullary cavity is often filled with trabecular bone or is virtually nonexistent (Houssaye 2009; de Ricqlès & de Buffrénil 2001). Such manifestations are usually labeled pachyostosis, but as Houssaye (2009) has shown, this term has been used to describe several different phenomena. They are, however, mechanical adaptations of the bones that help them to reduce different kinds of stresses. Through time they have become part of the genetic expression of the bone.


Environment

Although the environment of an organism obviously figures largely in almost every biological process in one sense or another, here we use a restricted sense of environment—namely, the direct influence that the ambient environment has on the form of bone tissues. Here are some examples. When temperatures are relatively cooler, the metabolic reactions of many tetrapods (those commonly and misleadingly called "ectothermic" or "cold-blooded") tend to work at slower rates than when temperatures are relatively higher. The effect is that bone grows more slowly as well, and this rate difference shows up in how the tissue is expressed. Generally, one may see more pronounced lines of arrested growth and thinner zones of cortical bone between the periodic growth lines. The tissue may also become more compact, with less vascularization and fewer bone cells. Calcium deficiency, starvation, and dehydration may exercise similar effects. These effects, of course, are being expressed developmentally, like all other features of bone, but here the difference is that as opposed simply to mechanical or ontogenetic influences, the environmental conditions for bone growth and formation are less than ideal, and these trigger the effects on bone formation.

In this mix one could also list diseases of bone such as osteoporosis; scarring that results from wounds, breaks, or infections; and various other lesions. All of these, however, also reflect developmental anomalies, because they describe the response by the tissue to some external insult to it, and this usually takes the form of replacement tissue. Osteoporosis is in a slightly different category because it generally describes what happens when the rate of resorption of calcium minerals in the skeleton, which is a normal part of growth, outstrips the growth and replacement of this tissue, which is just as normal. The result is that the bones become thinner in their walls and more brittle. So it is a mechanical result, but a developmental process, that is caused by direct environmental factors. It can be seen that these four categories are not mutually exclusive; after all, one inherits a developmental program from ancestors, so the "ontogeny" component is in a sense part of the "phylogeny" component. However, these qualifications are easily recognized, and do not impair us from identifying and controlling causal variables in the expression of bone tissue.


DIAGENESIS: A POST-MORTEM "SIGNAL" IN FOSSIL BONE

When a bone is extracted for histological analysis from an extant animal, it suffers no loss of information except as occasioned by the removal of soft tissues and the staining and embedding of the bone before sectioning. A fossilized bone, in contrast, carries with it the history of the post-mortem processes that befell it. The matrix in which it was preserved, and the minerals brought by the groundwater that bathed it for eons, stained it and filled its micro-crevasses—which is why fossil bones feel so much heavier (actually denser) than bones of recently deceased animals.

During fossilization, bones are often crushed and abraded. Photographs of cross-sections of crushed bones can be imaged and their fragments rearranged to restore the outline of the bone in life (e.g., Confuciusornis: de Ricqlès et al. 2003; Figure 1.2). Sometimes the minerals preserved inside the bones are different than those in the surrounding sediments, and this fact attests to differential accumulation through groundwater or the transport of the bone from its original resting place.

Post-mortem invasion of bacteria and fungi can destroy internal bone tissue, making it useless for histological analysis. Unfortunately, the external features of the bone usually provide no indication of this decay.

All of these changes are environmental rather than biological influences on the bone. They are post-mortem rather than in vivo. The other four "signals" that we discuss above are biological, and they manifest themselves during the life of the animal.


THE EXPLANATION OF VARIATION

All four of these "signals" help us to make sense of the kinds of variation that we see in the bone tissues of extinct tetrapods. They have been shown empirically to be reliable guides to the interpretation of the most basic question in the paleohistology of bone: Why is this tissue formed the way it is, and why does it differ from the tissue of this other animal? These variations, after all, are what we are trying to explain in the first place.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Bone Histology of Fossil Tetrapods by Kevin Padian, Ellen-Thérèse Lamm. Copyright © 2013 The Regents of the University of California. Excerpted by permission of UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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Table of Contents

Preface

Chapter 1. Why study the bone microstructure of fossil tetrapods?
Kevin Padian

Chapter 2. Biology of Bone
Adam K. Huttenlocker, Holly Woodward, and Brian K. Hall

Chapter 3. Selection of Specimens
Kevin Padian, Ellen-Thérèse Lamm, and Sarah Werning

Chapter 4. Preparation and Sectioning of Specimens
Ellen-Thérèse Lamm

Chapter 5. Image Standardization in Paleohistology
Timothy Bromage and Sarah Werning

Chapter 6. Database Standardization
Laura Wilson and Maria de Boef Miara

Chapter 7. Skeletochronology
Holly N. Woodward, Kevin Padian, and Andrew H. Lee

Chapter 8. Analysis of Growth Rates
Andrew H. Lee, Adam K. Huttenlocker, Kevin Padian, and Holly N. Woodward

Chapter 9. Evolution of Growth Rates and their Implications
Kevin Padian and Koen Stein

Chapter 10. Research Applications and Integration
Kevin Padian , Maria de Boef Miara, Hans C.E. Larsson, Laura Wilson, and Timothy Bromage
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