Dipartimento di Scienze Geologiche, Università Roma Tre, Italy.
Evol Dev. 2010 Nov-Dec;12(6):568-79. doi: 10.1111/j.1525-142X.2010.00442.x.
The phylogenetic placement of Tomistoma and Gavialis crocodiles depends largely upon whether molecular or morphological data are utilized. Molecular analyses consider them as sister taxa, whereas morphological/paleontological analyses set Gavialis apart from Tomistoma and other crocodylian species. Here skull allometric trajectories of Tomistoma and Gavialis were contrasted with those of two longirostral crocodylian taxa, Crocodylus acutus and Mecistops cataphractus, to examine similarities in growth trajectories in light of this phylogenetic controversy. Entire skull shape and its two main modules, rostrum and postrostrum, were analyzed separately. We tested differences for both multivariate angles between trajectories and for shape differences at early and late stages of development. Based on a multivariate regression of shape data and size, Tomistoma seems to possess a peculiar rate of growth in comparison to the remaining taxa. However, its morphology at both juvenile and adult sizes is always closer to those of Brevirostres crocodylians, for the entire head shape, as well as the shape of the postrostrum and rostrum. By contrast, the allometric trajectory of Gavialis always begins and ends in a unique region of the multidimensional morphospace. These findings concur with a morphological hypothesis that places Gavialis separate from Brevirostres, and Tomistoma closer to other crocodylids, and provides an additional, and independent, data set to inform on this ongoing phylogenetic discussion.
长吻鳄和印度鳄的系统发育位置在很大程度上取决于使用的是分子数据还是形态数据。分子分析认为它们是姐妹分类群,而形态/古生物学分析则将印度鳄与长吻鳄和其他鳄类物种区分开来。在这里,我们对比了长吻鳄和印度鳄的头骨生长轨迹与两种长吻鳄类群(湾鳄和马来鳄)的轨迹,以根据这种系统发育争议检验生长轨迹的相似性。我们分别分析了整个头骨形状及其两个主要模块,吻部和吻后部。我们测试了轨迹之间的多变量角度差异和发育早期和晚期的形状差异。基于形状数据和大小的多元回归,与其他分类群相比,长吻鳄的生长速度似乎具有独特性。然而,无论是在幼年还是成年阶段,其形态都与短吻鳄类鳄类更为接近,无论是整个头部形状,还是吻后部和吻部的形状。相比之下,印度鳄的生长轨迹总是从多维形态空间的一个独特区域开始和结束。这些发现与一个形态学假说一致,该假说认为印度鳄与短吻鳄类群分开,而长吻鳄与其他鳄类更为接近,并提供了一个额外的、独立的数据组来提供有关正在进行的系统发育讨论的信息。