Isometric contractile properties of sexually dimorphic forelimb muscles in the marine toad Bufo marinus Linnaeus 1758 : functional analysis and implications for amplexus
2006
SUMMARY It has been shown in the bullfrog, Rana catesbeiana Shaw 1802,
that certain forelimb muscles in males have different contractile properties
when compared with females, which may result from adaptation for amplexus. We
extended this study to a distantly related species, Bufo marinus
Linnaeus 1758, by testing the isometric contractile properties of three
muscles, abductor indicus longus (AIL), and flexor carpi radialis (FCR) (both
dimorphic muscles), and extensor carpi ulnaris (ECU) (non-dimorphic control).
In males the dimorphic muscles had greater wet mass and cross-sectional area
than in the females, and also produced significantly greater isometric force.
As in bullfrogs, however, the maximum tetanic force per cm 2 of
muscle cross-section did not differ between the sexes. In spite of this
similarity in maximum force, the two dimorphic muscles were much less
fatigable in the males than in the females. Lower fatigability in males
correlated with exceptionally elongated relaxation times that maintained high
levels of force between stimulus trains. This sustained force was negligible
in the females, suggesting that this feature may allow males to maintain
amplexus for prolonged periods. The same sustained force response was observed
in the earlier study of Rana catesbeiana . Because this response is
similar in Bufo and Rana , muscular properties correlated
with amplexus may be shared across anurans by inheritance of this response
from a common ancestor.
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