TL;DR: Cranial skeletal morphology, ontogeny and variation are examined in five species of Thorius, a genus of diminutive plethodontid salamanders that are among the smallest, extant, tailed tetrapods, and features implicate paedomorphosis as a predominant mechanism responsible for the evolution of decreased size.
Abstract: Cranial skeletal morphology, ontogeny and variation are examined in five species of Thorius, a genus of diminutive plethodontid salamanders that are among the smallest, extant, tailed tetrapods The skull of adull Thorius is characterized by: (1) limited development or absence of several ossified elements and dentition; (2) increased inter-and intraspecific variability; (3) novel morphological configurations of the braincase and jaw suspensorium Posthatching cranial mineralization in all species of Thorius is truncated precociously with respect to that typical of larger and more generalized plethodontid genera, such as Pseudoeurycea These features implicate paedomorphosis as a predominant mechanism responsible for the evolution of decreased size in Thorius from larger plethodontid ancestors Interspecific differences in cranial morphology are evident; species may be characterized by greater or lesser degrees of truncated development However, there is no consistent relationship between degree of paedomorphosis and mean adult body size in interspecific comparisons Adult morphology of several individual elements represent potentially useful taxonomic characters for distinguishing species
Reduction, increased variability, and morphological novelty are common to many lineages of dwarfed taxa They represent a null hypothesis for examination of the developmental mechanisms and morphological consequences of miniaturization in other groups
TL;DR: Salamanders of the genus Thorius (Plethodontidae) are among the smallest tetrapods; nine carpal arrangements occur in Thorius, more than in all twelve related genera of typically larger salamanders; six of these arrangements are unique.
Abstract: Salamanders of the genus Thorius (Plethodontidae) are among the smallest tetrapods. Hypotheses of limb skeletal evolution in these vertebrates were evaluated on the basis of estimates of natural variation, comparisons of skeletal homology, and analysis of molecular phylogeny. Nine carpal arrangements occur in Thorius, more than in all twelve related genera of typically larger salamanders; six of these arrangements are unique. They represent a trend toward a decrease in the number of separate cartilages that is independent of locomotor and ecological specialization. Miniaturization may be an important source of morphological novelty, distinct from local adaptation, in vertebrates.