Lycett Stephen J, Collard Mark
Leverhulme Centre for Human Evolutionary Studies, Department of Biological Anthropology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
J Hum Evol. 2005 Nov;49(5):618-42. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2005.07.004. Epub 2005 Aug 25.
Homoiologies are phylogenetically misleading resemblances among taxa that can be attributed to phenotypic plasticity. Recently, it has been claimed that homoiologies are widespread in the hominid skull, especially in those regions affected by mastication-related strain, and that their prevalence is a major reason why researchers have so far been unable to obtain a reliable estimate of hominid phylogeny. To evaluate this "homoiology hypothesis", we carried out analyses of a group of extant primates for which a robust molecular phylogeny is available-the papionins. We compiled a craniometric dataset from measurements that differ in their susceptibility to mastication-related strain according to developmental considerations and experimental evidence. We used the coefficient of variation and analysis of variance with post hoc least significant difference comparisons in order to evaluate the variability of the measurements. The prediction from the homoiology hypothesis was that dental measurements, which do not remodel in response to strain, should be less variable than low-to-moderate-strain measurements, and that the latter should be less variable than high-strain measurements. We then performed phylogenetic analyses using characters derived from the measurements and compared the resulting phylogenetic hypotheses to the group's consensus molecular phylogeny. The prediction was that, if the homoiology hypothesis is correct, the agreement between the craniometric and molecular phylogenies would be best in the analyses of dental characters, intermediate in the analyses of low-to-moderate-strain characters, and least in the analyses of high-strain characters. The results of this study support the suggestion that mastication-related mechanical loading can result in variation in hominid cranial characters. However, they do not support the hypothesis that homoiology is a major reason why phylogenetic analyses of hominid crania have so far yielded conflicting and weakly supported hypotheses of relationship. These findings are consistent with a recent test of the homoiology hypothesis using craniodental data from extant hominoids, and cast doubt on the validity of the homoiology hypothesis, as originally formulated.
同源相似性是不同分类单元之间在系统发育上具有误导性的相似性,可归因于表型可塑性。最近,有人声称同源相似性在灵长类头骨中广泛存在,尤其是在那些受咀嚼相关应力影响的区域,并且它们的普遍存在是研究人员迄今为止无法获得可靠的灵长类系统发育估计的主要原因。为了评估这个“同源相似性假说”,我们对一组现存的灵长类动物——狒狒进行了分析,它们有可靠的分子系统发育。我们根据发育考虑和实验证据,从对咀嚼相关应力敏感性不同的测量中编制了一个颅骨测量数据集。我们使用变异系数和方差分析以及事后最小显著差异比较来评估测量的变异性。同源相似性假说的预测是,不随应力重塑的牙齿测量值的变异性应小于低至中等应力测量值,而后者的变异性应小于高应力测量值。然后,我们使用从测量中得出的特征进行系统发育分析,并将所得的系统发育假说与该群体的共识分子系统发育进行比较。预测是,如果同源相似性假说是正确的,那么在牙齿特征分析中,颅骨测量系统发育和分子系统发育之间的一致性将最好,在低至中等应力特征分析中居中,在高应力特征分析中最差。这项研究的结果支持了这样的观点,即咀嚼相关的机械负荷会导致灵长类颅骨特征的变异。然而,它们并不支持同源相似性是灵长类颅骨系统发育分析迄今为止产生相互矛盾且支持力度较弱的关系假说的主要原因这一假说。这些发现与最近使用现存类人猿的颅齿数据对同源相似性假说进行的测试一致,并对最初提出的同源相似性假说的有效性提出了质疑。