JUNE 25, 2019
The frilled dragon exhibits a distinctive
large erectile ruff. This lizard usually keeps the frill folded back against
its body, but can spread it as a spectacular display to scare off predators.
Researchers at the University of Geneva (UNIGE), Switzerland, and the SIB Swiss
Institute of Bioinformatics report in the journal eLife that an
ancestral embryonic gill of the dragon embryo turns into a neck pocket that
expands and folds, forming the frill. The researchers then demonstrate that
this robust folding pattern emerges from mechanical forces during the
homogeneous growth of the frill skin due to the tensions resulting from its
attachment to the neck and head.
In Jurassic Park, while the computer
programmer Dennis Nedry attempts to smuggle dinosaur embryos off the island, he
is attacked and killed by a mid-sized dinosaur that erects a frightening neck frill. This fictional dinosaur
is clearly inspired by a real animal known as the frilled dragon, which lives
today in northern Australia and southern New Guinea. These lizards, also known
as Chlamydosaurus kingii, have a large disc of skin around their
head and neck. This frill is usually folded back against the body, but can
spread in a spectacular fashion to scare off predators and competitors. Folding
of the left and right sides of the frill occurs at three pre-formed ridges. But
it remains unclear which ancestral structure evolved to become the dragon's
frill, and how the ridges in the frill form during development.
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