The Pentadactyl Limb
- A pentadactyl limb is any limb that has five digits (e.g. five fingers or toes)
- Pentadactyl limbs are present in many species from many groups of organisms, including mammals, reptiles and amphibians
- In these different species, the pentadactyl limb has a fairly similar bone structure but sometimes fulfils quite a different function
- For example, the human hand is used for handling tools and other objects but the pentadactyl limb of a bat (i.e. the bones that make up a bat’s wing) is highly adapted for flight
- Although the individual bones of the pentadactyl limb in these two species are very different shapes and sizes, their layout is almost exactly the same
- The high level of similarity in the bone structure of the pentadactyl limbs of mammals, reptiles and amphibians provides strong evidence that these groups all evolved from a common ancestor
- Their limbs would most likely have had very different bone structures if they had all evolved from different ancestors
![Pentadactyl limbs, downloadable IGCSE & GCSE Biology revision notes](https://i0.wp.com/v1.nitrocdn.com/kDXDIJNDOaszRbpagqNqUtquAQQkiLpO/assets/static/optimized/rev-86a1fec/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Pentadactyl-limbs.png?w=650&ssl=1)
The bone structure of the pentadactyl limb of a human, a cat, a whale and a bat – although they have all evolved for different purposes, they all have the same basic layout.