The Pes.
The skeleton of the pes is in most respects a counterpart of that of the manus. Just as in the manus if one digit is absent it is the pollex, so in the pes it is the hallux. But while in the manus the third digit is always well developed, however much the limb may be modified, in the pes any of the digits may be lost. In all mammals the tibiale and intermedium fuse to form the astragalus, and the fourth and fifth tarsalia to form the cuboid. Sesamoid bones are considerably developed. In almost every case the phalanges and first metatarsal have epiphyses only on their proximal ends, while the remaining four metatarsals have epiphyses only on their distal ends.
In the Monotremata all the usual tarsal bones are distinct, and the five digits have the normal number of phalanges. Several sesamoid bones are developed, the most important one, found only in the male, being articulated to the tibia and bearing the curious horny spur. The ungual phalanges of the pes like those of the manus, are deeply cleft at their extremities. In the Echidnidae the pes is turned outwards and backwards in walking.
In the Marsupialia the pes is subject to great modifications, but in every case the seven usual tarsal bones are distinct. In the Didelphyidae the foot is broad, all five digits are well developed, and the hallux is opposable to the others. In the Dasyuridae the foot is narrow, and the hallux may be very small, or as in Thylacinus completely absent. In Notoryctes the pes is much less abnormal than the manus, and all five digits have the usual number of phalanges. The fifth metatarsal has a curious projecting process, and there is a large sesamoid above the hallux. In the Wombats (Phascolomyidae) the foot is short and broad, the digits are all distinct, and the hallux is divaricated from the others.
In the remaining marsupials the second and third metacarpals and digits are very slender, and are enclosed within a common integument. This condition is known as syndactylism, and its effect is to produce the appearance of one toe with two claws. In the Kangaroos (Macropodidae) the pes is very long and narrow, owing to the elongation of the metacarpals. The fourth digit is greatly developed, the fifth moderately so, while the hallux is absent, and the second and third digits are very small. The Peramelidae have the foot constructed on the same plan as in the Kangaroos, and in one genus Choeropus the same type of foot is carried to a greater extreme than even in the Kangaroos. Thus the fourth digit is enormously developed, the second and third are small, and the fifth smaller still, while the hallux is absent. In the Phalangers and Koalas though the second and third toes are very slender, the hallux is well developed and opposable.
Edentata. In the Sloths the pes much resembles the manus, being long and narrow, but in both genera the second, third and fourth digits are well developed. Most of the other Edentates have a but little modified pes with the normal number of tarsal bones and the complete series of digits. In Cycloturus however the hallux is vestigial and it is absent in Glyptodonts. Megatherium has a greatly modified pes, the hallux is absent, and the second digit vestigial, while the third is very large, having an enormous ungual phalanx. The calcaneum too is abnormally large.
No trace of the pes occurs in either Sirenia or Cetacea.
In the Ungulata the pes like the manus is subject to much variation and is of great morphological importance.
In the Ungulata vera the pes is never plantigrade and never has more than four digits, the hallux being absent. The cuboid always articulates with the astragalus, and the tarsal bones strongly interlock. As was the case also with the manus, the pes is formed on two well-marked types characteristic respectively of the Artiodactyla and Perissodactyla.
Artiodactyla. Just as in the manus, the third and fourth digits are well and subequally developed; their ungual phalanges have the contiguous sides flat, and the axis of the limb passes between them, and between the cuboid and navicular. The astragalus has both the proximal and distal surfaces pulley-like, and articulates with the navicular and cuboid by two facets of nearly equal size. The calcaneum articulates with the lower end of the fibula if that bone is fully developed.