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Lower axial skeleton of the musk shrew (Suncus murinus)
Authors:T Hijikata  T Sakai  T Yohro
Institution:Department of Anatomy, Faculty of Medicine, University of Tokyo, Japan.
Abstract:Macroscopic structure as well as pre- and postnatal development of the lumbar, sacral, and caudal vertebrae of the musk shrew (Suncus murinus, Insectivora) were observed. The lumbar vertebrae possess two pairs of unusual processes, hyperapophyses and hypapophyses. The hyperapophyses are located on the dorsal surface of the caudal articular processes of all the lumbar vertebrae, whereas the hypapophyses are found on the caudal part of the ventral surface of the bodies in the first few lumbar vertebrae. The former gives attachment to the Mm. rotatores lumborum and the latter to the Mm. psoas major and minor. The articular processes of the lumbar vertebrae are oriented more horizontally compared with those in other mammals. The sacrum is very narrow transversely due to poor development of the ventrolateral wing. The auricular surface includes cranial parts of the wing and of the fused vertebral arches as well as the cranial articular process of the first sacral vertebra. In the caudal vertebrae, chevron bones are H-shaped when viewed ventrally, and give attachment to tendons of the caudal muscles. This report describes the relationships between the structural peculiarities of the lower axial skeleton and the locomotive habits of the musk shrew.
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