Department of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
J Evol Biol. 2010 Mar;23(3):463-78. doi: 10.1111/j.1420-9101.2009.01922.x. Epub 2010 Jan 14.
A key question in evolution is the degree to which morphofunctional complexes are constrained by phylogeny. We investigated the role of phylogeny in the evolution of biting performance, quantified as bite forces, using phylogenetic eigenvector regression. Results indicate that there are strong phylogenetic signals in both absolute and size-adjusted bite forces, although it is weaker in the latter. This indicates that elimination of size influences reduces the level of phylogenetic inertia and that the majority of the phylogenetic constraint is a result of size. Tracing the evolution of bite force through phylogeny by character optimization also supports this notion, in that relative bite force is randomly distributed across phylogeny whereas absolute bite force diverges according to clade. The nonphylogenetically structured variance in bite force could not be sufficiently explained by species-unique morphology or by ecology. This study demonstrates the difficulties in identifying causes of nonphylogenetically structured variance in morphofunctional character complexes.
进化中的一个关键问题是形态功能综合体在多大程度上受到系统发育的限制。我们使用系统发育特征向量回归研究了形态功能综合体在咬合力进化中的作用,即作为咬合力来量化。结果表明,绝对咬合力和大小调整后的咬合力都存在强烈的系统发育信号,尽管后者较弱。这表明,消除大小的影响会降低系统发育惯性的水平,而大多数系统发育限制是由大小造成的。通过特征优化沿着系统发育追踪咬合力的进化也支持了这一观点,因为相对咬合力在系统发育上是随机分布的,而绝对咬合力则根据分支而发散。在形态功能综合体中,无法用物种特有的形态或生态学来充分解释非系统发育结构的咬合力方差。本研究表明,识别形态功能综合体中非系统发育结构方差的原因存在困难。