In most mammalian species the cardiac skeleton is composed of coarse collagen fibres, fibrocartilage, and
pieces of hyaline cartilage. Bone, the os cordis, is a regular constituent of the ruminant heart. The cardiac
skeleton of the otter (Lutra lutra) has not previously been described. The skeleton in 30 otter hearts was
studied by x-ray analysis and light microscopy. Serial sections were cut parallel to the atrioventricular
plane and histochemical staining methods were performed to identify connective tissue fibres,
glycosaminoglycans, mineral deposits, and bone. Age and sex of the animals under investigation were
considered. The otter heart skeleton was composed of coarse collagen fibres with intercalated pieces of
fibrous and/or hyaline cartilage, calcified cartilage, and lamellar bone with red or white marrow. Pieces of
hyaline cartilage were not clearly defined: a perichondrial layer was missing and coarse connective tissue
continuously transformed into fibrous and hyaline cartilage. In both sexes the amount of cartilage and bone
were found to increase with age.
Our results establish the presence of bony material in the heart skeleton of the otter, a small mammalian
species. This finding indicates that differentiation of bone is not exclusively related to the size of the organ.
Increasing amounts of calcified cartilage and bone correlated with increasing age.