Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. ISSN 0077-8923 A N N A L S O F T H E N E W Y O R K A C A D E M Y O F SC I E N C E S Issue: Respiratory Science Recent advances on the functional and evolutionary morphology of the amniote respiratory apparatus Markus Lambertz Institut für Zoologie, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, Bonn, Germany Address for correspondence: Markus Lambertz, Sektion Herpetologie, Zoologisches Forschungsmuseum Alexander Koenig, Adenauerallee 160, 53113 Bonn, Germany. [email protected] Increased organismic complexity in metazoans was achieved via the specialization of certain parts of the body involved in different faculties (structure–function complexes). One of the most basic metabolic demands of animals in general is a sufficient supply of all tissues with oxygen. Specialized structures for gas exchange (and transport) consequently evolved many times and in great variety among bilaterians. This review focuses on some of the latest advancements that morphological research has added to our understanding of how the respiratory apparatus of the primarily terrestrial vertebrates (amniotes) works and how it evolved. Two main components of the respiratory apparatus, the lungs as the “exchanger” and the ventilatory apparatus as the “active pump,” are the focus of this paper. Specific questions related to the exchanger concern the structure of the lungs of the first amniotes and the efficiency of structurally simple snake lungs in health and disease, as well as secondary functions of the lungs in heat exchange during the evolution of sauropod dinosaurs. With regard to the active pump, I discuss how the unique ventilatory mechanism of turtles evolved and how understanding the avian ventilatory strategy affects animal welfare issues in the poultry industry. Keywords: Amniota; breathing; evolution; functional morphology; respiration; respiratory biology Introduction Respiration is a universal phenomenon of life that allows organisms to utilize chemically bound energy in an efficient way. Respiring oxygen is doubtlessly the most common or at least best known strategy to make this energy available. In principle, this is true for most multicellular animals (Metazoa), but it applies especially to the vertebrates (Craniota1 ). The origin and early radiation of craniotes took place in the aquatic realm, and, for this reason, one finds numerous adaptations for water breathing in the form of a huge structural and functional variety of gills in the more basal taxa.2 However, especially in limnic or brackish habitats, a very large number of fish species are at least facultative if not obligatory air breathers.3 The potential to use airborne oxygen as an additional resource brings a significant selective advantage, especially in bodies of water with low oxygen content. On the average, about 30 times more oxygen is contained in a liter of air than in the same volume of water. In addition to that, the much lower viscosity of air results in less effort during the ventilation of the oxygen-bearing medium.2 Once the faculty (structure–function complex)4 for air breathing evolved, it opened the doors to a terrestrial lifestyle. The present review focuses on the functional and evolutionary morphology of the respiratory apparatus in the primarily terrestrial vertebrate clade: Amniota. Although a number of intriguing studies related to the evolutionary and functional morphology of the respiratory apparatus have appeared in recent years (e.g., Refs. 5–15), the scope of the present article is mainly restricted to the research presented during the symposium entitled “Recent advances on the functional and evolutionary morphology of the respiratory apparatus” at the Third International Congress of Respiratory Science.16 Although the model shown in Figure 1 illustrates the general principles of a respiratory faculty, I limit the discussion here to amniotes. The doi: 10.1111/nyas.13022 100 C 2016 New York Academy of Sciences. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1365 (2016) 100–113 Lambertz Morphology of the amniote respiratory apparatus Figure 1. The faculty of the amniote respiratory apparatus. The lungs act as the “exchanger” and the “passive pump,” in gas exchange and ventilatory air movements, respectively. The respiratory musculature (mainly of the trunk) acts as the active pump that generates the primary ventilatory air movements. Additional complexes involved in the respiratory apparatus are the circulatory system and the neuronal control. Modified from Ref. 2. respiratory apparatus is understood as a functional unit consisting of at least four larger complexes.17 One of these complexes is the lungs as the site of gas exchange. Nonetheless, the lungs not only serve as the diffusion-driven “exchanger” but also have a mechanical function: they contribute as a “passive pump” to ventilatory air movements. However, the main motor for respiratory air movement, the “active pump,” is represented by the interplay of the muscular and skeletal elements of the trunk (at least primarily for amniotes). Additionally, the circulatory system that transports the gases within the blood is a central component of the respiratory apparatus in its broadest sense. This is last but not least because blood, together with its dissolved gases, has an effect on pH, and thus also has a regulatory function. The primary regulatory unit, however, is the nervous system. While the circulatory and nervous systems are not further dealt with here, the exchanger and the active pump will be the central aspects of this review. The exchanger From so complex a beginning: the ancestral amniote gas exchanger Lungs were doubtlessly already present before the rise of the earliest amniotes.18 The much greater content of oxygen in the air alone facilitated the supply channel for the metabolic machinery of amniotes, but other factors associated with terrestrialization (e.g., keratinized skin) required that the lungs act as the primary site for gas exchange. On the basis of several centuries of typology-driven anatomical research, it was until recently the widely purported view that the ancestral amniote lung was comparable to that of extant amphibians: by implication a simple, almost sac-like, single-chambered organ.19–22 All of the complexity embodied in the diversity of amniote pulmonary morphology has been thought to represent independently evolved optimizations with respect to aerial gas exchange.23 One main reason for that argument is based on the fact that most Lepidosauria (tuatara, lizards, and snakes) indeed exhibit single-chambered lungs,24 superficially resembling those found in amphibians. However, upon closer examination, there are significant differences between the single-chambered lungs of amphibians and most lepidosaurs. The first concerns a feature that becomes evident on superficial examination: the extrapulmonary airways of amniote lungs always have a subapical entrance,25 whereas they enter amphibian lungs at their anterior apex. A second major macroscopic difference concerns the path of the pulmonary artery. In amphibians, it forms a plexus that supplies the entire lung, while in amniote lungs, it exhibits a strictly C 2016 New York Academy of Sciences. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1365 (2016) 100–113 101 Morphology of the amniote respiratory apparatus Lambertz hierarchically branched pattern.26 This is true for both all of the internally branched lungs of mammals, birds, crocodiles, and turtles and the singlechambered lungs of lizards and snakes. In these latter species, the pattern of the vascular supply also mirrors the location of the larger septa that occasionally extend into the pulmonary lumen of the single-chambered lungs. This leads to the question of whether the so-called niches that are formed by these septa might, in fact, be rudimentary chamber Anlagen. A critical species for all of these considerations is the tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus), the sole extant representative of the Rhynchocephalia. Traditionally and consistently, the lungs of the tuatara have been described as being more similar to those of amphibians than to any lizard.27 Reexamination, however, revealed all of the above-mentioned typical characteristics of amniote single-chambered lungs: subapical bronchial entrance and several discrete septa that extend into the pulmonary lumen, each with individual blood supply by a branch of a strictly hierarchically branched pulmonary artery.26 Given that these possible indications for a branched nature of the lungs are present in all amniotes, including the tuatara and even in species with a highly derived, single-chambered pulmonary morphology, such as cobras, the hypothesis of a common branched Bauplan for amniote lungs receives further support. In order to test this hypothesis, however, it was necessary to actually examine the ontogeny of a typical single-chambered lung of a lizard. Geckos fulfill all demands for such a case study: they have singlechambered lungs,24 they are phylogenetically quite basal among extant lepidosaurs, and they are easy to maintain and breed. The Madagascar ground gecko Paroedura picta was chosen for this study. The early developmental stages of its lungs could indeed be characterized as a discrete “branching phase,” during which several chamber-like buds branch off the central Anlage, just as it takes place in the more “complex” amniote lungs.26 During later development, however, the branching stops and the lung switches to an “expansion phase,” which is characterized by the growth in volume and development of the parenchyma. The topology of the adult lung is achieved well before hatching (Fig. 2). Although no single study has documented the entire ontogeny of such a single-chambered lung, partial developmental series from a variety of lepidosaurs, including the tuatara, corroborate these findings.26 102 Pulmonary complexity was apparently secondarily reduced in lepidosaurs, which immediately raises the question, Why? Multichambered lungs, in general, are more advantageous than single-chambered ones of comparable size: they present a larger surface area for gas exchange and they usually are much more easy and cost effective to ventilate, due to their higher compliance.28–30 However, the fossil record indicates that lepidosaurs underwent a miniaturization.31 For such tiny lizards, maintaining a complexly branched lung results in severe biophysical problems. The terminal air spaces would have become so small and the surface tension would have become so high that it would have been impossible to inflate these miniscule lungs without an accessory structure, such as air sacs or a diaphragm.26 Given that neither can be assumed to have been present, simplification was apparently the only chance to take advantage of the ecological opportunities that were associated with becoming small. In conclusion, this represents a paradigm shift for our understanding of amniote lung evolution: it started complex, branched, and multichambered, and either remained that way, became yet more complex, or became secondarily simplified.26 It may further be worth noting that several of the early anatomists and embryologists, such as Ivar Broman (1868–1946) and Fanny Moser (1872–1953), had already provided crucial data for this revised scenario.26 This once again highlights the importance of the huge amount of classical literature dealing with anatomical and embryological topics, which, because of the fact that a lot of it has been published in languages other than English, frequently but unfortunately is overlooked or even neglected in current studies. Long and simple, yet so effective: detecting pathologies in snake lungs Among the lepidosaurs, numerous lineages independently evolved an elongated body that is often associated with a reduction of the extremities.32,33 While such a snake-like habitus can be encountered in almost all major clades of lizards, true snakes (Serpentes) represent the most diverse taxon of the Squamata (all extant lepidosaurs except the tuatara). Such a dramatic change of the Bauplan must clearly affect the entire internal anatomy of these animals. While there are different solutions to how these C 2016 New York Academy of Sciences. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1365 (2016) 100–113 Lambertz Morphology of the amniote respiratory apparatus Figure 2. The lungs of the Madagascar ground gecko, Paroedura picta. The upper row shows P. picta embryos at different stages of their development, and the middle row shows the corresponding embryonic lungs. During early developmental stages, the lungs produce several buds that branch off from the central Anlage. This is defined as the branching phase of pulmonary development. Later in ontogeny, the branching stops and the lungs expand. This is defined as the expansion phase. The adult morphology is already achieved well before hatching. The bottom row shows dried lungs of an adult specimen (lateral face of the left lung on the left side and medial view of the opened right lung on the right side). Note the branching pulmonary artery that supplies the septa bordering the dorsal and ventral niches. Modified from Refs. 26 and 43. various snake-like animals cope with the problems associated with an elongated body,34–36 all snakes follow a similar path when it comes to their respiratory systems. We have just discussed that lepidosaurs reduced their internal pulmonary complexity and secondarily developed functional single-chambered lungs. The same applies to snakes as well. However, the right lungs of snakes are also extremely elongated, while the left lungs are always reduced in size and may be entirely reduced or present only as vestigial rudiments.37 In spite of their—with a few exceptions—extremely simple Bauplan, when it comes to the internal structural pattern and the enlargement of the respiratory surface area, the huge size of the single right lung and/or its efficiency in gas exchange apparently allows many snake species (e.g., elapids) to maintain highly active lifestyles. In general, little is known about the morphological diffusion capacity of reptilian lungs,24 and, in particular, the distribution of the gas-exchange tissue (parenchyma) is extremely diverse among the different clades of snakes.37 In light of the tremendous species diversity of snakes (as well as the huge anatomical diversity of their lungs), until recently there was, surprisingly, only a single morphometric study on the lungs of a single colubrid species.38 This now has been expanded by work on the ball python (Python regius) and Burmese python (P. molurus),39,40 both of which are representatives of giant constrictors (Pythonidae), which also are frequently kept as pets. As with all pets, health issues are important, and there is great interest in and need for effective veterinary treatment. Many snakes are known to be very susceptible to pulmonary infections,41 but there appears to be a high tolerance for these diseases until clinically relevant symptoms eventually become recognizable.42 This raises the question C 2016 New York Academy of Sciences. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1365 (2016) 100–113 103 Morphology of the amniote respiratory apparatus Lambertz Figure 3. Histological sections of the pulmonary parenchyma of Python molurus. (A) A healthy individual and (B) an infected snake at the same magnification. Note the thickened connective tissue of the trabecular septa (s) in the infected specimen. Further note the filling of the faveolar space (f) with mucus and pus in the infected specimen. sm, trabecular smooth muscle core. Modified from Ref. 40. of how the animals cope with these conditions and how they remain (at least superficially) unaffected by such infections. The histology of such infected pulmonary tissue revealed that it is usually characterized by a thickening of the connective tissue of the trabecular septa (Fig. 3). The consequence of this is an increase in the diffusion barrier distance and therefore a reduction of the morphological diffusion capacity. In fact, the morphological diffusion capacity for oxygen is reduced to about one-fourth of healthy values in infected specimens.40 Given this dramatic alteration, why does it take so long before clinically recognizable symptoms appear? If the morphological values for the potential of oxygen uptake are compared to physiological recordings of actual oxygen consumption rates, it turns out that even the infected and morphologically seriously impeded animals still can easily satisfy their demand for oxygen, at least under resting conditions. The lungs apparently have a remarkable overcapacity that allows them to function to a certain degree in spite of such infections.40 Possible functional explanations for this overcapacity could lie in the fact that, under healthy conditions, when 104 the animals assume a coiled up posture or are digesting large prey, the entire respiratory parenchyma does not have constant access to air. However, this once again highlights that the structurally simple lungs of lepidosaurs should not be regarded as an insurmountable obstacle or impediment: lepidosaurs are not “poor” because they have such simple lungs. While there indeed appears to be a limitation for reaching large body sizes for highly active animals with simple lungs,43 pythonids show that there is a solution to becoming quite large with truly sac-like lungs, which, in fact, appear to have been one key to the success of lepidosaurs as one of the most diverse lineages of terrestrial vertebrates. How to become a giant sauropod: modeling heat exchange properties of the respiratory system After having discussed the fundamental structural properties of amniote lung evolution and how certain lungs work in health and disease in terms of their primary function (gas exchange), we now come to the function of the exchanger in temperature control. As already pointed out, an effective respiratory apparatus (considering the four C 2016 New York Academy of Sciences. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1365 (2016) 100–113 Lambertz Morphology of the amniote respiratory apparatus Figure 4. Diagrammatic representation of the functional cascade required for the evolution of “high-performance” animals among amniotes. Starting from the basal amniote condition that, among other traits, includes terrestrial reproduction with internal fertilization, aspiration breathing, and multichambered lungs, a three-chambered heart with two aortas, water-resistant skin, and economical excretory system, high-performance status evolved independently in various lineages. The final frontier or barrier required to achieve this status appears to have been the development of homoiothermic endothermy. However, before this could be achieved, the respiratory faculty (including its circulatory system component) and the nutritional system (including the procurement and processing of food responsible for delivering the required metabolic energy) had to improve. Original diagram designed by the author together with Steven F. Perry (Bonn, Germany). above-mentioned complexes it comprises) is one of the prerequisites for the evolution of large and active animals with a homoiothermic/endothermic physiology (Fig. 4). However, particularly large body sizes come at various costs for the organisms. The largest terrestrial animals that ever evolved were the sauropod dinosaurs, and several species reached body masses that were hypothesized to exceed 10 metric tons.44,45 When the metabolic rate of these giants was estimated, it became evident that these animals must have encountered heat dissipation problems: the concept of “gigantothermy” was born.46 How was it possible that these animals existed without encountering the thermal limits of their physiological processes and as a result significant if not lethal damage? It has long been known that sauropod dinosaurs often exhibit a high degree of postcranial skeletal pneumaticity, which reduced the mean density of the body and thus can be interpreted as an adaptation that facilitated the evolution of such large body sizes.47–50 In recent years, however, this postcranial pneumaticity has been further interpreted as the result of the presence of voluminous air sacs comparable to those found in birds.51,52 Sauropoda is the sister taxon of Theropoda, which eventually gave rise to the birds as the sole surviving representatives of the dinosaurs. An avian-like respiratory system has also been proposed already for the nonavian theropods,53,54 and in recent years, a similar respiratory system for the sauropod dinosaurs has become the preferred hypotheses as well.52,55–57 Furthermore, it has long been known that birds are able to dissipate excess metabolically produced heat via their respiratory system.58–60 While extant birds are available for experimental studies and direct measurements, the extinct nonavian dinosaurs are obviously not. Methods such as the extant phylogenetic bracket61 are valuable tools to infer the presence of certain morphological traits, while a functional morphological approximation62 cannot only aid in testing such hypotheses but also C 2016 New York Academy of Sciences. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1365 (2016) 100–113 105 Morphology of the amniote respiratory apparatus Lambertz help in bringing back life to extinct animals. Modeling approaches are therefore not only extremely helpful, but are also frequently the only option to tackle evolutionarily important questions such as the origin of the largest terrestrial vertebrates. Computational fluid dynamics is one of such modeling approaches that can be used to infer a potential heat-dissipation mechanism via the respiratory system in sauropod dinosaurs. As a first step, a relatively simple, two-dimensional model of an extant avian analog has been created, and respiratory heat dissipation has been simulated.63 In a further refined approach, this model has been transferred into a three-dimensional simulation.64 Both studies revealed comparable results with realistic values if compared to the actual experimental data for birds. The main difference between these two approaches was that the pressure values were more realistic in the three-dimensional simulation. However, since the absolute pressures are irrelevant to the pertinent question, the two-dimensional approach remains extremely attractive because of its simplicity and the resulting much lower computing times. At any rate, it turned out that the trachea is solely responsible for respiratory heat exchange. Work in progress currently aims at transferring the obtained results and models to a putative sauropod respiratory system with its gigantic dimensions. This approach has the potential, especially in combination with additional estimates for radiational heat loss over the skin, to answer the question about how sauropods were able to reach such exceptional body sizes. The respiratory apparatus could indeed have played more than one central role in this evolutionary cascade: via the provision of sufficient oxygen for the huge metabolic demand, but simultaneously also via the dissipation of the resulting excess metabolic heat through evaporative cooling in the trachea. The active pump Breathing in a straitjacket: the unique chelonian ventilatory dilemma In terms of their ventilatory apparatus, turtles are doubtlessly the most astonishing group of vertebrates that ever evolved. The basic motor for ventilation in amniotes was (and frequently still is) the ribs. Although numerous auxiliary breathing mechanisms that at least compliment costal ventilation evolved in all major amniote lineages, none entirely eliminated the ribs as part of their respira106 tory apparatus—none but turtles, in which the ribs are integrated in their most iconic morphological feature: the shell. The ribs broaden during development and fuse with each other (as well as with several other bones) and thereby form a large portion of the carapace:65,66 the dorsal part of the shell. On a functional level, this has severe consequences, because the ribs become completely immobile and cannot be recruited to generate the volumetric changes that are required for ventilatory air movements. So how do turtles breathe? This question, in fact, is a very old one that can be dated back at least to one of the founding fathers of experimental biology: Marcello Malpighi.67,68 In a letter that was published in part by the Royal Society of London in 1671,69 Malpighi draws the comparison to frogs and how they breathe. Extant amphibians employ a buccal pump mechanism, which, in principle, can be described as the process of swallowing air.70–72 Indeed, at first glance, this seems to make perfect sense for turtles. Observing resting turtles reveals that they spend a large amount of time performing oscillatory movements of their buccal floor. Given that the ribs cannot be recruited for these purposes and that it is known that air swallowing exists, why not assume that turtles do the same? In fact, the idea that turtles also perform buccal pumping to ventilate their lungs persisted well into the 20th century.73 However, during the 1790s, Robert Townson performed several basic functional morphological and physiological studies in Göttingen.67,74 He subsequently published a privately printed book, which, in addition to English translations of his original Latin dissertations, also contained a previously unpublished study on ventilation in turtles.75 There, he questioned the air-swallowing hypothesis and proposed a new one: turtles use antagonistic muscles of their ventral body wall to generate ventilatory air flow. Although it required more than a century and a half and sophisticated electromyographical analyses68,76 to test Townson’s hypothesis, it turned out to be correct. Inspiratory air flow mainly is generated by the cup-shaped M. obliquus abdominis, which is situated in the posterior flanks of all turtles (Fig. 5). When this muscle contracts, it flattens and decreases pressure within the shell and thus also within the lungs, and air flows in. Expiration is mainly achieved by the M. transversus, which directly wraps around the pleuroperitoneal cavity (Fig. 5). Upon contraction, this muscle pushes the viscera against the lungs, C 2016 New York Academy of Sciences. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1365 (2016) 100–113 Lambertz Morphology of the amniote respiratory apparatus Figure 5. Reproduction of the very first illustrations of the main respiratory musculature in turtles; from Ref. 75. In his seminal study, Robert Townson (1762–1827)106 was the first to hypothesize that antagonistic muscles of the ventral body wall are the motor of ventilation in turtles. The original captions are provided here in full, with occasional clarifications added in brackets. Plate I represents a tortoise (Testudo orbicularis (Emys orbicularis)) on its back. * The sternum (plastron) turned back. + (Note that there is no direct representation for the symbol used between Q and i on the right-hand side of Plate I.) The peritoneum covering the left lobe of the lungs. (A) The muscle of inspiration (M. transversus abdominis) nearly in its natural situation, still connected to the testa (carapace), but separated from the sternum (plastron). (B) The place of its insertion in the testa (carapace). (C) Where it was connected to the sternum (plastron). (a) The same muscle still connected to the testa (carapace) and sternum (plastron), but turned back. (b) When (sic, most likely meant where) it is inserted in the testa (carapace). (c) Where it is inserted in the sternum (plastron). (D.d) The cellular membrane (connective tissue) by which it is united to the muscle of expiration (M. obliquus abdominis). (E.e) The muscle of expiration (M. obliquus abdominis). (F.f) Where it arises from the peritoneum. (G.g) The dotted line shows where the peritoneum ceases to be connected to the bladder (cloacal bursa). (H.h) The outline of the bladder (cloacal bursa) when inflated. (I) The middle bladder not covered by the peritoneum. (i) The outline of it where covered by the peritoneum. (K) The right lobe (simply the right lung) of the lungs. (L) One of the bronchia (right extrapulmonary bronchus). (M) The aspera arteria (trachea). (N) The neck. (O) The neck curved as when brought under the testa (carapace). (P) Two of the muscles that draw the neck under the testa. (Q) The inside of the testa (carapace) where the fore legs have been cut away. (R) The os hyoides (os hyoideum). (S) Its horns. (T) The inferior maxilla (lower jaw). (V) The superior maxilla (upper jaw). (W) The os pubis. Plate II. Represents the testa (carapace), or upper shell of the tortoise (Testudo orbicularis (Emys orbicularis)) with the muscles of respiration. (A) The muscle of expiration (M. transversus abdominis). (B) Its insertion in the testa (carapace) near the spina dorsi (vertebral column). (C) Termination of the muscular fibers where they were connected to the peritoneum. (D) The same muscle turned back. (E) The muscle of inspiration (M. obliquus abdominis). (F) Its insertion in the margin of the testa (carapace). (G) Where it was inserted in the margin of the sternum (plastron). and air flows out. While the general homology and synonymy of the respiratory muscles in turtles is of most likely interest to the specialist only (see Ref. 77 for a detailed discussion), it might be worth noting that the “M. diaphragmaticus,” as Bojanus in his classical anatomical study78 called it, actu- ally represents a thoracic portion of the transverse muscle. In order to avoid any further confusion, either with the mammalian or crocodilian muscles with the corresponding name, “M. diaphragmaticus” in turtles should be replaced by M. transversus thoracis.77 C 2016 New York Academy of Sciences. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1365 (2016) 100–113 107 Morphology of the amniote respiratory apparatus Lambertz Theoretically, this unique ventilatory mechanism must have originated before the evolution of the shell. The crucial questions, however, are. When did it take place and can we actually track it in the fossil record? Recent years have brought spectacular new insights into the early evolution and origin of turtles.66,79–85 The current best candidate for the oldest known representative of the chelonian lineage is Eunotosaurus africanus, from the Permian of South Africa.85,86 On the basis of the bone histology of a single rib of this species, it was assumed that this stem-group representative that still exhibits individual ribs that are not fused to form a complete shell already lacked the intercostal musculature, which is also lacking in modern turtles.66 This would have had severe implications for its mode of breathing, as the intercostal muscles are the main motor of rib movements. A more complete sampling corroborated this assumption of lacking intercostals and furthermore led to a refined hypothesis about the morphology of the ventilatory apparatus of E. africanus. Potential osteological correlates for muscle attachments were discovered only on the third, sixth, and seventh ribs, while ribs four and five lacked such indications.77 These putative attachment sites were restricted to the caudal edges of ribs 3, 6, and 7, making them unlikely to represent intercostal muscles. This distribution of muscle attachments, however, corresponds well with the origin of the main expirator in extant turtles, the M. transversus, which is bipartite in nature and composed of a thoracic (M. t. thoracis) and abdominal (M. t. abdominis) portion. It was consequently concluded that E. africanus, although it still possessed individual ribs and no shell, already showed the bipartite nature of its transverse muscle; this part of the chelonian ventilatory apparatus was already present in the currently earliest known stem representative. It was therefore further concluded that the evolutionary origin of the turtle Bauplan was achieved by a division of function. Initially, the ribs and associated trunk musculature had dual functions in respiration and locomotion. The ribs broadened over time and provided mechanical support and aided in torsional control, which freed several of the muscle groups from their original function77 (Fig. 6). However, the most crucial question remains: when and how did the main inspiratory muscle (the M. obliquus abdominis) evolve to its caudally 108 displaced and cup-shaped form? There are unfortunately no unambiguous osteological correlates for this muscle, meaning that its presence and location must be indirectly inferred. Lyson et al.77 hypothesized, based on an extant analog,76 that a gravity-induced passive mode of inspiration could at least have supplemented ventilatory air movements. Through various interorgan connections, the liver was assumed to pull on the lungs (compare the schematic cross section in Fig. 6), decreasing intrapulmonary pressure and allowing air to flow in. The origin of the chelonian M. obliquus abdominis will most likely remain a conundrum. It is interesting, however, to note that among the shell-less stem representatives of turtles, the plastron, which is the ventral part of the shell, begins to fuse earlier than the carapace. E. africanus still possessed a set of paired and unfused gastralia,77 but the currently known next younger representative (Pappochelys rosinae) also has broadened yet unfused ribs, yet the gastralia are partly fused, which is interpreted as the first evidence of a plastron-like formation.84 In keeping with the scenario proposed by Lyson et al.,77 this evolutionary sequence is highly plausible, as increased rigidity of the ventral portion of the body wall facilitates the inspiratory function of the M. obliquus abdominis, which in extant turtles inserts on the caudal edge of the plastron. The broiler chicken: a basic functional morphological question at the forefront of animal welfare issues The avian respiratory system presents a unique ventilatory strategy among extant amniotes (but see the discussion about nonavian dinosaurs above). While the exchanger is kept at a more or less constant volume during the entire breathing cycle, highly pliable air sacs cause the ventilatory air movements.87 These air sacs are ventilated by a pump mechanism of the sternum, which is elevated and lowered dorsoventrally.88–92 The sternum consequently has to be regarded as a central element in the avian ventilatory apparatus, and there appears to have been a constraint on maintaining this structure throughout the evolution of the modern birds (Neornithes).93 Although it remains debatable when and how active flight evolved in early birds,94–97 it is characteristic for the vast majority of the extant species. The avian M. pectoralis, which originates at the C 2016 New York Academy of Sciences. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1365 (2016) 100–113 Lambertz Morphology of the amniote respiratory apparatus Figure 6. Proposed scenario for the evolution of the unique chelonian ventilatory mechanism. During the phylogeny of stem turtles, an increase in trunk rigidity occurred (left). A division of function between the ribs (torsional control) and the hypaxial muscles (ventilation) is assumed to have already occurred at the very base of the stem lineage of turtles (right). The intracoelomic organization (lower middle) is assumed to have facilitated this via the potential for gravity-induced (g) passive inspiration. Modified from Refs. 77 and 84. sternum, generates the downbeat of the wing and is usually the largest single muscle in flying birds. This also makes it very attractive for the meat industry. Indeed, the production of broiler chickens, for instance, has been geared toward the selection for strains that show large pectoral muscle mass and has resulted in an increase over the last decades in order to maximize profits. This results in a mechanical conflict: an increase in pectoral muscle mass must have an impact on the animal’s performance. Additional load influences not only locomotor costs, but also those associated with ventilation.98–101 The ultimate desire for fast production of broilers today results in quite abnormal animals in which the pectoral muscle mass grows much faster than the rest of the of animal. Neither the lungs nor several other organs can keep up with this artificially accelerated development.102 In addition, the ossification of the skeleton of broilers is far from complete at their slaughter age. For instance, the uncinate processes, osseous projections of the posterior side of the vertebral ribs in birds that are integral for avian ventilatory performance,103–105 retain a cartilaginous connection to the rib.102 These analyses indicate that the relative heterochronic and allometric development of broilers makes them very susceptible for pathological conditions and results in an unintended yet significant impact on animal welfare of these chickens.102 These analyses furthermore not only highlight that broiler chickens represent a powerful model to examine basic functional morphological questions but also that breathing mechanics has a great relevance for applied science in modern society. C 2016 New York Academy of Sciences. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1365 (2016) 100–113 109 Morphology of the amniote respiratory apparatus Lambertz Conclusions The latest advancements in our understanding of the functional and evolutionary morphology of the amniote respiratory apparatus summarized here elucidate a general conclusion: even after several centuries of morphological research, there still remains a need for studies on such presumably ancient questions. Many issues have yet to be resolved, and even almost dogmatically accepted views can turn out to be incorrect or at least questionable upon closer examination. The integration of various approaches, such as the close collaboration of neontologists and paleontologists, or of fundamental and applied researchers, or the application of modeling approaches that sometimes originate in distant disciplines, appears to be the most promising path in order to achieve far-reaching conclusions. Solid morphological data remain a cornerstone of the development of critical evolutionary hypotheses that subsequently can be tested using more modern approaches, such as developmental genetics. Some of the recent advances that are summarized here appear to be simply basic research, but upon closer examination, they can have great relevance for applied questions as well, including animal welfare issues. Traditional morphological research and therefore also the proper education in this field, which, in turn, requires maintaining attractive faculty positions for scientists with a respective background, remain important in modern universities and society. Although the golden age of morphology doubtlessly already took place during the 19th century, morphological research has not lost any of its contemporariness and value today. Acknowledgments The present article derives from a symposium held on July 8, 2014, in Bad Honnef, Germany, during the course of the Third International Congress of Respiratory Science (ICRS). Financial support for the ICRS-3 was granted by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft to Steven F. Perry (Pe 267/16-1). Further partial financial support for the particular symposium from which this paper was derived was granted to the author by the Deutsche Zoologische Gesellschaft. I wish to express my sincere thanks to all speakers of the symposium, whose diverse talks gave fascinating insights into various aspects of the 110 latest morphological research. These were (alphabetically): Jonathan R. Codd (Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK), Tyler R. Lyson (Denver Museum of Nature & Science, Denver, CO), J. Matthias Starck (Department of Biology II, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Germany), Steven F. Perry (Institut für Zoologie, Rheinische Friedrich-WilhelmsUniversität Bonn, Bonn, Germany), Peter G. Tickle (Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK), Christian Wirkner (Allgemeine & Spezielle Zoologie, Institut für Biowissenschaften, Universität Rostock, Germany), and Ulrich Witzel (Fakultät Maschinenbau, Arbeitsgruppe Biomechanik, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Bochum, Germany). I would furthermore like to cordially thank Steven F. Perry for his constructive criticism on earlier versions of the manuscript. Conflicts of interest The author declares no conflicts of interest. References 1. Lambertz, M. 2016. Craniota vs. Craniata: arguments towards nomenclatural consistency. J. Zool. Syst. Evol. Res. doi: 10.1111/jzs.12126. 2. Hsia, C.C.W., A. Schmitz, M. Lambertz, et al. 2013. Evolution of air breathing: oxygen homeostasis and the transitions from water to land and sky. Compr. Physiol. 3: 849– 915. 3. Graham, J.B. 1997. 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