Wiens J J, Slingluff J L
Section of Amphibians and Reptiles, Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213-4080, USA.
Evolution. 2001 Nov 11;55(11):2303-18. doi: 10.1111/j.0014-3820.2001.tb00744.x.
One of the most striking morphological transformations in vertebrate evolution is the transition from a lizardlike body form to an elongate, limbless (snakelike) body form. Despite its dramatic nature, this transition has occurred repeatedly among closely related species (especially in squamate reptiles), making it an excellent system for studying macroevolutionary transformations in body plan. In this paper, we examine the evolution of body form in the lizard family Anguidae, a clade in which multiple independent losses of limbs have occurred. We combine a molecular phylogeny for 27 species, our morphometric data, and phylogenetic comparative methods to provide the first statistical phylogenetic tests of several long-standing hypotheses for the evolution of snakelike body form. Our results confirm the hypothesized relationships between body elongation and limb reduction and between limb reduction and digit reduction. However, we find no support for the hypothesized sequence going from body elongation to limb reduction to digit loss, and we show that a burrowing lifestyle is not a necessary correlate of limb loss. We also show that similar degrees of overall body elongation are achieved in two different ways in anguids, that these different modes of elongation are associated with different habitat preferences, and that this dichotomy in body plan and ecology is widespread in limb-reduced squamates. Finally, a recent developmental study has proposed that the transition from lizardlike to snakelike body form involves changes in the expression domains of midbody Hox genes, changes that would link elongation and limb loss and might cause sudden transformations in body form. Our results reject this developmental model and suggest that this transition involves gradual changes occurring over relatively long time scales.
脊椎动物进化过程中最显著的形态转变之一,是从蜥蜴般的身体形态过渡到细长、无肢(蛇状)的身体形态。尽管这种转变具有显著特征,但在亲缘关系密切的物种中(尤其是有鳞目爬行动物)反复发生,使其成为研究身体结构宏观进化转变的绝佳系统。在本文中,我们研究了蜥蜴科(Anguidae)的身体形态进化,该科中已经发生了多次独立的肢体缺失。我们结合了27个物种的分子系统发育、我们的形态测量数据以及系统发育比较方法,对几个长期存在的关于蛇状身体形态进化的假说进行了首次统计系统发育检验。我们的结果证实了身体伸长与肢体减少之间以及肢体减少与指(趾)减少之间的假设关系。然而,我们没有找到支持从身体伸长到肢体减少再到指(趾)缺失这一假设顺序的证据,并且我们表明穴居生活方式并非肢体缺失的必然相关因素。我们还表明,蜥蜴科动物通过两种不同方式实现了相似程度的整体身体伸长,这些不同的伸长模式与不同的栖息地偏好相关,并且这种身体结构和生态的二分法在肢体减少的有鳞目动物中广泛存在。最后,最近的一项发育研究提出,从蜥蜴状身体形态到蛇状身体形态的转变涉及身体中部Hox基因表达域的变化,这些变化将连接伸长和肢体缺失,并可能导致身体形态的突然转变。我们的结果否定了这种发育模型,并表明这种转变涉及在相对较长时间尺度上发生的渐进变化。