Sallan Lauren Cole, Friedman Matt
Department of Organismal Biology and Anatomy, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2012 May 22;279(1735):2025-32. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2011.2454. Epub 2011 Dec 21.
Adaptive radiations, bouts of morphological divergence coupled with taxonomic proliferation, underpin biodiversity. The most widespread model of radiations assumes a single round, or 'early burst', of elevated phenotypic divergence followed by a decline in rates of change or even stasis. A vertebrate-specific model proposes separate stages: initial divergence in postcranial traits related to habitat use, followed by diversification in cranial morphology linked to trophic demands. However, there is little empirical evidence for either hypothesis. Here, we show that, contrary to both models, separate large-scale radiations of actinopterygian fishes proceeded through distinct cranial and later postcranial stages of morphological diversification. Early actinopterygians and acanthomorph teleosts dispersed in cranial morphospace immediately following the end-Devonian extinction and the Cretaceous origin of the acanthomorph clade, respectively. Significant increases in postcranial morphological variation do not occur until one interval after cranial diversification commenced. Therefore, our results question the universality of the 'general vertebrate model'. Based on the results of model-fitting exercises and application of the divergence order test, we find little evidence that the early onset of cranial diversification in these two radiations is due to elevated rates of cranial change relative to postcranial change early in their evolutionary histories. Instead, postcranial and cranial patterns are best fit by an Ornstein-Uhlenbeck model, which is characterized by constant evolutionary rates coupled with a strong central tendency. Other groups have been reported to show early saturation of cranial morphospace or tropic roles early in their histories, but it is unclear whether these patterns are attributable to dynamics similar to those inferred for our two model radiations.
适应性辐射,即形态差异的爆发与分类学上的增殖相结合,是生物多样性的基础。最广泛的辐射模型假设存在一轮单一的、或“早期爆发”的表型差异增加,随后变化速率下降甚至停滞。一个脊椎动物特有的模型提出了不同的阶段:与栖息地利用相关的颅后性状的初始差异,随后是与营养需求相关的颅骨形态的多样化。然而,这两种假设都几乎没有实证证据。在这里,我们表明,与这两种模型相反,辐鳍鱼类的单独大规模辐射是通过形态多样化的不同颅骨阶段和后来的颅后阶段进行的。早期辐鳍鱼类和棘鳍类硬骨鱼分别在泥盆纪末期灭绝和棘鳍类进化枝的白垩纪起源后立即在颅骨形态空间中扩散。直到颅骨多样化开始后的一个时间间隔,颅后形态变化才会显著增加。因此,我们的结果对“一般脊椎动物模型”的普遍性提出了质疑。基于模型拟合练习的结果和分歧顺序检验的应用,我们几乎没有发现证据表明这两种辐射中颅骨多样化的早期开始是由于其进化历史早期颅骨变化速率相对于颅后变化速率的提高。相反,颅后和颅骨模式最适合奥恩斯坦-乌伦贝克模型,该模型的特点是进化速率恒定且具有强烈的中心趋势。据报道,其他类群在其历史早期也表现出颅骨形态空间或生态位角色的早期饱和,但尚不清楚这些模式是否归因于与我们的两个模型辐射推断出的动态相似的动态。