Adactyly
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In biology, dactyly is the arrangement of digits ( fingers and toes) on the
hand A hand is a prehensile, multi-fingered appendage located at the end of the forearm or forelimb of primates such as humans, chimpanzees, monkeys, and lemurs. A few other vertebrates such as the koala (which has two opposable thumbs on each "h ...
s, feet, or sometimes wings of a tetrapod animal. It comes from the Greek word δακτυλος (''dáktylos'') = "finger". Sometimes the ending "-dactylia" is used. The derived adjectives end with "-dactyl" or "-dactylous".


As a normal feature


Pentadactyly

Pentadactyly (from Greek "five") is the condition of having five digits on each limb. It is traditionally believed that all living tetrapods are descended from an ancestor with a pentadactyl limb, although many species have now lost or transformed some or all of their digits by the process of evolution. However, this viewpoint was challenged by
Stephen Jay Gould Stephen Jay Gould (; September 10, 1941 – May 20, 2002) was an American paleontologist, evolutionary biologist, and historian of science. He was one of the most influential and widely read authors of popular science of his generation. Gould sp ...
in his 1991 essay "Eight (Or Fewer) Little Piggies", where he pointed out polydactyly in early tetrapods and described the specializations of digit reduction. Despite the individual variations listed below, the relationship is to the original five-digit model. In reptiles, the limbs are pentadactylous. Dogs and cats have tetradactylous paws but the dewclaw makes them pentadactyls.


Tetradactyly

Tetradactyly (from Greek "four") is the condition of having four digits on a limb, as in many
amphibian Amphibians are tetrapod, four-limbed and ectothermic vertebrates of the Class (biology), class Amphibia. All living amphibians belong to the group Lissamphibia. They inhabit a wide variety of habitats, with most species living within terres ...
s, birds, and theropod dinosaurs.


Tridactyly

Tridactyly (from Greek "three") is the condition of having three digits on a limb, as in the rhinoceros and ancestors of the horse such as '' Protohippus'' and '' Hipparion''. These all belong to the Perissodactyla. Some birds also have three toes, including emus, bustards, and quail.


Didactyly

Didactyly (from Greek "two") or bidactyly is the condition of having two digits on each limb, as in the Hypertragulidae and two-toed sloth, ''Choloepus didactylus''. In humans this name is used for an abnormality in which the middle digits are missing, leaving only the thumb and fifth finger, or big and little toes. Cloven-hoofed mammals (such as deer, sheep and cattle – '' Artiodactyla'') have only two digits, as do ostriches.


Monodactyly

Monodactyly (from Greek "one") is the condition of having a single digit on a limb, as in modern horses and other equidae (though one study suggests that the frog might be composed of remnants of digits II and IV, rendering horses as not truly monodactyl) as well as
sthenurine Sthenurinae (from ''Sthenurus'', Greek for 'strong-tailed') is a subfamily within the marsupial family Macropodidae, known as 'short faced kangaroos'. No members of this subfamily are extant today, with all becoming extinct by the late Pleistocen ...
kangaroos. Functional monodactyly, where the weight is supported on only one of multiple toes, can also occur, as in the theropod dinosaur ''
Vespersaurus ''Vespersaurus'' (meaning "western lizard") is a genus of noasaurid theropod dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous Rio Paraná Formation in the Paraná Basin, Brazil. The type and only species is ''V. paranaensis'', which would have lived in the gia ...
''. The pterosaur '' Nyctosaurus'' retained only the wing finger on the forelimb, rendering it also partially monodactyl.


As a congenital defect

Among humans, the term "five-fingered hand" is sometimes used to mean the abnormality of having five fingers, none of which is a thumb.


Syndactyly

Syndactyly (from Greek "together") is a condition where two or more digits are fused together. It occurs normally in some
mammal Mammals () are a group of vertebrate animals constituting the class Mammalia (), characterized by the presence of mammary glands which in females produce milk for feeding (nursing) their young, a neocortex (a region of the brain), fur or ...
s, such as the siamang and most diprotodontid marsupials such as kangaroos. It occurs as an unusual condition in humans.


Polydactyly

Polydactyly (from Greek "many") is when a limb has more than the usual number of digits. This can be: * As a result of congenital abnormality in a normally pentadactyl animal. Polydactyly is very common among domestic cats. For more information, see polydactyly. *
Polydactyly in early tetrapod Polydactyly in stem-tetrapods should here be understood as having more than five digits to the finger or foot, a condition that was the natural state of affairs in the very first stegocephalians during the evolution of terrestriality. The polydac ...
aquatic animals, such as in ''
Acanthostega gunnari ''Acanthostega'' (meaning "spiny roof") is an extinct genus of stem-tetrapod, among the first vertebrate animals to have recognizable limbs. It appeared in the late Devonian period (Famennian age) about 365 million years ago, and was anatomi ...
'' (Jarvik 1952), one of an increasing number of genera of stem-tetrapods known from the Upper Devonian, which are providing insights into the appearance of tetrapods and the origin of limbs with digits. It also occurs secondarily in some later tetrapods, such as ichthyosaurs. The use of a term normally reserved for congenital defects reflects that it was regarded as an anomaly at the time, as it was believed that all modern tetrapods have either five digits or ancestors that did.


Oligodactyly

Oligodactyly (from Greek "few") is having too few digits when not caused by an
amputation Amputation is the removal of a limb by trauma, medical illness, or surgery. As a surgical measure, it is used to control pain or a disease process in the affected limb, such as malignancy or gangrene. In some cases, it is carried out on indi ...
. It is sometimes incorrectly called hypodactyly or confused with aphalangia, the absence of the phalanx bone on one or (commonly) more digits. When ''all'' the digits on a hand or foot are absent, it is referred to as ''adactyly''.


Ectrodactyly

Ectrodactyly, also known as ''split-hand malformation'', is the congenital absence of one or more central digits of the hands and feet. Consequently, it is a form of oligodactyly. News anchor
Bree Walker Bree Walker (born Patricia Lynn Nelson; February 26, 1953) is an American radio talk show host, actress, and disability-rights activist. She gained fame as the first on-air American television network news anchor with ectrodactyly. Walker work ...
is probably the best-known person with this condition, which affects about one in 91,000 people. It is conspicuously more common in the Vadoma in Zimbabwe.


Clinodactyly

Clinodactyly Clinodactyly is a medical term describing the curvature of a digit (a finger or toe) in the plane of the palm, most commonly the fifth finger (the " little finger") towards the adjacent fourth finger (the " ring finger"). It is a fairly common is ...
is a medical term describing the curvature of a digit (a finger or toe) in the plane of the palm, most commonly the fifth finger (the "little finger") towards the adjacent fourth finger (the "ring finger"). It is a fairly common isolated anomaly which often goes unnoticed, but also occurs in combination with other abnormalities in certain genetic syndromes, such as Down syndrome, Turner syndrome and Cornelia de Lange syndrome.


In birds


Anisodactyly

Anisodactyly is the most common arrangement of digits in birds, with three toes forward and one back. This is common in songbirds and other perching birds, as well as hunting birds like eagles, hawks, and falcons. This arrangement of digits help with perching and/or climbing and clinging. This occurs in Passeriformes, Columbiformes, Falconiformes, Accipitriformes, Galliformes and a majority of other birds.


Syndactyly

Syndactyly, as it occurs in birds, is like anisodactyly, except that the third and fourth toes (the outer and middle forward-pointing toes), or three toes, are fused together almost to their claws, as in the belted kingfisher (''Megaceryle alcyon''). This is characteristic of Coraciiformes (kingfishers, bee-eaters, Coraciidae, rollers, and relatives).


Zygodactyly

Zygodactyly (from Greek ζυγος, even-numbered) is an arrangement of digits in birds and chameleons, with two toes facing forward (digits 2 and 3) and two back (digits 1 and 4). This arrangement is most common in arboreal species, particularly those that climb tree trunks or clamber through foliage. Zygodactyly occurs in the parrots, woodpeckers (including flicker (bird), flickers), cuckoos (including Geococcyx, roadrunners), and some owls. Zygodactyl tracks have been found dating to 120–110 million years ago (early Cretaceous), 50 million years before the first identified zygodactyl fossils. All Psittaciformes, Cuculiformes, the majority of Piciformes and the osprey are zygodactyl.


Heterodactyly

Heterodactyly is like zygodactyly, except that digits 3 and 4 point forward and digits 1 and 2 point back. This is found only in trogons, though the Enantiornithes, enantiornithean ''Dalingheornis'' might also have had this arrangement.


Pamprodactyly

Pamprodactyly is an arrangement in which all four toes point forward, outer toes (toe 1 and sometimes 4) often if not regularly reversible. It is a characteristic of Swift (bird), swifts (Apodidae) and mousebirds (Coliiformes).


Chameleons

The feet of chameleons are organized into bundles of a group of two and a group of three digits which oppose one another to grasp branches in a pincer-like arrangement. This condition has been called zygodactyly or didactyly, but the specific arrangement in chameleons does not fit either definition. The feet of the front limbs in chameleons, for instance, are organized into a medial bundle of digits 1, 2 and 3, and a lateral bundle of digits 4 and 5, while the feet of the hind limbs are organized into a medial bundle of digits 1 and 2, and a lateral bundle of digits 3, 4 and 5. On the other hand, zygodactyly involves digits 1 and 4 opposing digits 2 and 3, which is an arrangement that chameleons do not exhibit in either front or hind limbs.


Aquatic tetrapods

In many Secondarily aquatic tetrapods, secondarily aquatic vertebrates, the non-bony tissues of the forelimbs and/or hindlimbs are fused into a single Flipper (anatomy), flipper. Some remnant of each digit generally remains under the soft tissue of the flipper, though digit reduction gradually occurs such as in baleen whales (Baleen whale, mysticeti). Marine mammals evolving flippers represents a classic example of convergent evolution, and by some analyses, parallel evolution. Full webbing of the digits in the Manus (anatomy), manus and/or Pes (anatomy), pes is present in a number of aquatic tetrapods. Such animals include marine mammals (cetaceans, sirenians, and pinnipeds), marine reptiles (modern sea turtles and extinct ichthyosaurs, mosasaurs, Plesiosauria, plesiosaurs, Metriorhynchidae, metriorhynchids), and flightless aquatic birds such as penguins. Hyperphalangy, or an increase in the number of Phalanx bone, phalanges beyond ancestral mammal and reptile conditions, is present in modern cetaceans and extinct marine reptiles.


Schizodactyly

Schizodactyly is a primate term for grasping and clinging with the second and third digit, instead of the thumb and second digit.


See also

* Even-toed ungulate, Artiodactyl – even-toed ungulates, clade Cetartiodactyla * Odd-toed ungulate, Perissodactyl – odd-toed ungulates


References


External links

* {{Congenital malformations and deformations of musculoskeletal system Congenital disorders of musculoskeletal system Zoology Vertebrate anatomy Comparative anatomy Bird anatomy