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Armored geckos: A histological investigation of osteoderm development in T arentola (Phyllodactylidae) and G ekko (Gekkonidae) with comments on their regeneration and inferred function
Author(s) -
Vickaryous M. K.,
Meldrum G.,
Russell A.P.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of morphology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.652
H-Index - 74
eISSN - 1097-4687
pISSN - 0362-2525
DOI - 10.1002/jmor.20479
Subject(s) - biology , gekkonidae , anatomy , gecko , dorsum , zoology , squamata
Osteoderms are bone‐rich organs found in the dermis of many scleroglossan lizards sensu lato, but are only known for two genera of gekkotans (geckos): Tarentola and Gekko . Here, we investigate their sequence of appearance, mode of development, structural diversity and ability to regenerate following tail loss. Osteoderms were present in all species of Tarentola sampled ( Tarentola annularis , T. mauritanica , T. americana , T. crombei , T. chazaliae ) as well as Gekko gecko , but not G. smithii . Gekkotan osteoderms first appear within the integument dorsal to the frontal bone or within the supraocular scales. They then manifest as mineralized structures in other positions across the head. In Tarentola and G. gecko , discontinuous clusters subsequently form dorsal to the pelvis/base of the tail, and then dorsal to the pectoral apparatus. Gekkotan osteoderm formation begins once the dermis is fully formed. Early bone deposition appears to involve populations of fibroblast‐like cells, which are gradually replaced by more rounded osteoblasts. In T. annularis and T. mauritanica , an additional skeletal tissue is deposited across the superficial surface of the osteoderm. This tissue is vitreous, avascular, cell‐poor, lacks intrinsic collagen, and is herein identified as osteodermine. We also report that following tail loss, both T. annularis and T. mauritanica are capable of regenerating osteoderms, including osteodermine, in the regenerated part of the tail. We propose that osteoderms serve roles in defense against combative prey and intraspecific aggression, along with anti‐predation functions. J. Morphol. 276:1345–1357, 2015. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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