7 July 2017
By Andy Coghlan
Frogs legs have sprung a big
surprise – contrary to textbook biology, they have primitive kneecaps.
The kneecaps are made of dense,
fibrous cartilage rather than bone, and appear to be much better suited to
soaking up the strains of leaping
and jumping than the bony human patella.
They may have been missed until
now because they are not clearly visible on frog leg bones, even with a
microscope, says Virginia
Abdala of Argentina’s Institute of Neotropical Biodiversity, who led
the investigation. The researchers analysed full skeletons of 20 species, but
they were only able to see kneecaps in the eight specimens from which they took
tissue slices for analysis.
One implication of the discovery
is that kneecaps like this began to evolve in the Devonian period 400 million
years ago, when the first
four-legged animals reached land, the researchers say.
“Until now it was thought that
the evolution of kneecaps coincided with the arrival of tetrapods that lay eggs
on land or retain fertilised eggs in the body,” says Abdala. This investigation
shows that the process really started with fibrocartilage in frogs, she says.
No comments:
Post a Comment
You only need to enter your comment once! Comments will appear once they have been moderated. This is so as to stop the would-be comedian who has been spamming the comments here with inane and often offensive remarks. You know who you are!