BIOMECHANICS AND EVOLUTION OF THE FEEDING STRUCTURES IN LATE DEVONIAN PLACODERMS
Functionally relevant morphological and mechanical variables were measured on 9 arthrodire skulls from the Gogo Formation as well as 5 skulls of Dunkleosteus terreli from the Cleveland Shale. All skulls were analyzed using Placodermodel 2.0, a dynamic computer model based on lever and linkage mechanics that calculates skull kinetics and mechanical feeding metrics in fossil vertebrates. I use the model to compare the ten arthrodire species to each other and to modern groups. Results reveal a range of kinematic transfer coefficients (KT) and mechanical advantage values that change during the feeding cycle. Arthrodire KT values (3.2-3.4) are generally higher then a subset of modern labrid oral linkages (0.45-1.5), but near the high end of the range of modern hyoid linkages (0.07-4.7), indicating that arthrodires utilized suction as part of their feeding mechanism. The high range of mechanical advantage measurements (0.1-0.68) indicates considerable diversity in feeding strategy. Recent phylogenies imply that different placoderm taxa attain high KT values in a variety of ways and that the linkage system modeled here evolved multiple times within placoderms. Such results show how quantified hypotheses of ecological diversity can be obtained even in a phylogenetically remote and long extinct basal gnathostome taxon.