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Aurore Canoville

Aurore Canoville
Stiftung Schloss Friedenstein Gotha / Museum für Naturkunde Berlin

PhD

About

59
Publications
10,799
Reads
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1,250
Citations
Additional affiliations
November 2016 - August 2021
North Carolina State University
Position
  • Postdoctoral Researcher
Description
  • National Science Fondation EAGER Fellowship
April 2014 - October 2016
University of Bonn
Position
  • Postdoctoral Researcher
Description
  • Alexander von Humboldt Fellowship; Maria von Linden Fellowship
January 2011 - December 2013
University of Cape Town
Position
  • PostDoc Position
Description
  • Claude Leon Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship; Biological Sciences Departmental Fellowship
Education
September 2007 - November 2010
Sorbonne Université
Field of study
September 2006 - June 2007
Pierre and Marie Curie University - Paris 6 / Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle
Field of study
  • Systematic, Evolution and Paleontology
September 2005 - June 2006
Pierre and Marie Curie University - Paris 6 / Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle
Field of study
  • Populations and Ecosystems Biology

Publications

Publications (59)
Article
Full-text available
The Posidonienschiefer Formation of southern Germany has yielded an array of incredible fossil vertebrates. One of the best represented clades therein is Teleosauroidea, a successful thalattosuchian crocodylomorph group that dominated the coastlines. The most abundant teleosauroid, Macrospondylus bollensis, is known from a wide range of body sizes,...
Article
Birds have colonized various habitats during their evolutionary history, including the aquatic environment. Several studies have investigated the gross morphological changes of the avian skeleton in response to increasing swimming capabilities, but few have documented in detail the microstructural specializations associated with this process. Bone...
Article
Full-text available
Simple Summary Our understanding of what can preserve in the fossil record, and for how long, is constantly evolving with the use of new scientific techniques and exceptional fossil discoveries. In this study, we examine the state of preservation of a Tyrannosaurus rex that died about 66 million years ago. This specimen has previously been studied...
Article
Full-text available
Paleopathological diagnoses provide key information on the macroevolutionary origin of disease as well as behavioral and physiological inferences that are inaccessible via direct observation of extinct organisms. Here we describe the external gross morphology and internal architecture of a pathologic right second metatarsal (MMNS VP‐6332) of a larg...
Article
Full-text available
Here, we investigate whether bone microanatomy can be used to infer the locomotion mode (cursorial vs. graviportal) of large terrestrial birds. We also reexamine, or describe for the first time, the bone histology of several large extant and extinct flightless birds to (i) document the histovariability between skeletal elements of the hindlimb; (ii...
Article
The ability to determine the sex of extinct dinosaurs by examining the bones they leave behind would revolutionize our understanding of their paleobiology; however, to date, definitive sex‐specific skeletal traits remain elusive or controversial. Although living dinosaurs (i.e., extant birds) exhibit a sex‐specific tissue called medullary bone that...
Article
Given that the biology of the recently extinct aepyornithids is poorly understood, we undertook a histological study of 29 skeletal elements of adult and juvenile specimens of Aepyornithidae, i.e. Aepyornis maximus, Aepyornis hildebrandti and Vorombe titan, in addition to a group of taxonomically unidentifiable juvenile Aepyornithiformes. Comparati...
Article
Full-text available
Medullary bone (MB) is a sex-specific tissue produced by female birds during the laying cycle, and it is hypothesized to have arisen within Avemetatarsalia, possibly outside Avialae. Over the years, researchers have attempted to define a set of criteria from which to evaluate the nature of purported MB-like tissues recovered from fossil specimens....
Article
Full-text available
Background Medullary bone (MB) is an estrogen-dependent, sex-specific tissue produced by female birds during lay and inferred to be present in extinct avemetatarsalians (bird-line archosaurs). Although preliminary studies suggest that MB can be deposited within most skeletal elements, these are restricted to commercial layers or hormonally treated...
Article
Full-text available
Isolated ribs and vertebrae of Middle Triassic sauropterygians are studied. The vertebrae have a well‐defined large cavity in their centra, which is a unique feature and is without any modern analogue. The articular facets of vertebrae are made of endochondral bone including calcified as well as uncalcified cartilage. Vertebrae are pachyosteosclero...
Article
Full-text available
To date, eco-evolutionary dynamics in the ascent of tyrannosauroids to top predator roles have been obscured by a 70-million-year gap in the North American (NA) record. Here we report discovery of the oldest Cretaceous NA tyrannosauroid, extending the lineage by ~15 million years. The new taxon—Moros intrepidus gen. et sp. nov.—is represented by a...
Poster
Full-text available
Von Ebner lines (VELs) are incremental growth marks of daily dentin apposition, which are widely used to calculate the: (1) age of teeth; (2) dentin deposition rate (DDR, estimated by mean VEL increment width VEIW); and (3) tooth replacement rate (TRR) in extinct taxa. However, the influence of methods used to assess TRR and mean VEIW is rarely con...
Article
Full-text available
So far, studies documenting bone vascularization patterns have been mainly focused on amniotes. Lissamphibians, generally considered to have poorly vascularized to avascular bone cortices because of their low metabolic rates, have been largely overlooked, and no comparative dataset of bone vascularization exists for this group. To document this asp...
Article
Full-text available
Background Bone structure has a crucial role in the functional adaptations that allow vertebrates to conduct their diverse lifestyles. Much has been documented regarding the diaphyseal structure of long bones of tetrapods. However, the architecture of trabecular bone, which is for instance found within the epiphyses of long bones, and which has bee...
Article
Full-text available
Oxygen isotope compositions of bone phosphate (δ18Op) were measured in broiler chickens reared in 21 farms worldwide characterized by contrasted latitudes and local climates. These sedentary birds were raised during an approximately 3 to 4-month period, and local precipitation was the ultimate source of their drinking water. This sampling strategy...
Article
Numerous morphological studies have been carried out on pareiasaurs; yet their taxonomy and biology remain incompletely understood. Earlier works have suggested that these herbivorous parareptiles had a short juvenile period as compared to the duration of adulthood. Several studies further suggested an (semi-) aquatic lifestyle for these animals, b...
Article
Bone ornamentation, in the form of rounded pits framed by a network of ridges, is a frequent feature among a great diversity of gnathostome taxa. However, the basic osteogenic processes controlling the differentiation and development of these reliefs remain controversial. The present study is a broad comparative survey of this question with the cla...
Article
Bone microanatomical diversity in extant and extinct tetrapods has been studied extensively, using increasingly sophisticated quantitative methods to assess its ecological, biomechanical and phylogenetic significance. Most studies have been conducted on the appendicular skeleton, and a strong relationship was found between limb bone microanatomy an...
Article
Genome size spans over a 300-fold range among vertebrates (132 pg for Protopterus aethiopicus, the marbled lungfish, and 0.35 pg for Tetraodon nigroviridis, the green spotted pufferfish). While phylogenetic analysis of genome size has helped clarify how this variation evolved in multiple tetrapod groups, the ancestral tetrapod condition still remai...
Article
The small-bodied stereospondyl Lydekkerina huxleyi, dominated the amphibian fauna of the South African Lower Triassic. Even though the anatomy of this amphibian has been well described, its growth strategies and lifestyle habits have remained controversial. Previous studies attributed the relative uniformity in skull sizes to a predominance of suba...
Article
Urodeles have the largest genomes among extant tetrapods, varying greatly between metamorphic and neotenic species, which have the smallest and the largest genomes of the group, respectively. The evolutionary tempo and mode of genome size expansion in urodeles are poorly documented, especially because genome size does not directly fossilize. Conseq...
Article
Full-text available
Enigmatic avialan remains of Gargantuavis philoinos from the Ibero-Armorican island of the Late Cretaceous European archipelago (Southern France) led to a debate concerning its taxonomic affinities. Here, we show that the bone microstructure of Gargantuavis resembles that of Apteryx, the extinct emeids and Megalapteryx from New Zealand, and indicat...
Article
Full-text available
Little is known about the initial phases of lissamphibian history (before the Cretaceous), because their fossil record is quite scanty. Only the morphology of the earliest members has been investigated, although other sets of data, from bone microanatomy and histology, are known to yield valuable paleobiological information. In the present study, w...
Article
Pareiasaurs were an abundant group of large herbivores during Middle and Late Permian times. The habitat of pareiasaurs has proven enigmatic, and ecological interpretations from anatomical and taphonomic data have included aquatic, semi-aquatic to fully terrestrial lifestyles. Insight into the ecology of extinct taxa can also be gained from stable...
Article
The taxonomy and paleobiology of the Upper Permian dicynodont Cistecephalus have been much debated over the last century. Fossils of Cistecephalus have been identified as belonging either to one species or up to six species and hypotheses concerning their lifestyle range from aquatic to arboreal and fossorial. Earlier studies of Cistecephalus focus...
Article
An unsolved question in evolutionary genomics is whether amniote genomes have been expanding or contracting since the common ancestor of this diverse group. Here, we report on the polarity of amniote genome size evolution using genome size estimates for 14 extinct tetrapod genera from the Paleozoic and early Mesozoic Eras using osteocyte lacunae si...
Article
Osteosclerosis, or inner bone compaction, and pachyostosis, or outer hyperplasy of bone cortices (swollen bones), are typical features of tetrapods secondarily adapted to life in water. These peculiarities are spectacularly exemplified by the ribs of extant and extinct Sirenia. Sea cows are thus the best model for studying this kind of bone structu...
Article
A study on the most exhaustive taxonomic sample of amniotes (75 extant and nine extinct taxa) of any quantitative work on this topic published so far demonstrates a strong relationship between lifestyle (aquatic, amphibious or terrestrial) and humeral microanatomy. We suggest that corrections for multiple testing be used to check for statistical ar...
Article
A new method to assemble time-calibrated supertrees is able to incorporate paleontological and molecular dates. This method, along with new branch length transformations, is implemented in the Stratigraphic Tools for Mesquite. It was used here to analyse a dataset on bone microanatomy, body size and habitat of 46 species of lissamphibians through a...
Article
A study of body size and the compactness profile parameters of the humerus of 37 species of lissamphibians demonstrates a relationship between lifestyle (aquatic, amphibious or terrestrial) and bone microstructure. Multiple linear regressions and variance partitioning with Phylogenetic eigenVector Regressions reveal an ecological and a phylogenetic...
Article
Full-text available
Bone microanatomy appears to track changes in various physiological or ecological properties of the individual or the taxon. Analyses of sections of the tibia of 99 taxa show a highly significant (P <or= 0.005) relationship between long-bone microanatomy and habitat. Randomization tests reveal a highly significant (P <or= 0.005) phylogenetic signal...
Article
Full-text available
Starting in 2004, our lab has published several studies on the relationship between bone microanatomy, lifestyle (aquatic to terrestrial), and the phylogeny of tetrapods. These studies emphasized quantitative and statistical analyses. Therefore, the raw data used in these studies were never published. This is unfortunate because no model captures a...

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