Institut für Spezielle Zoologie und Evolutionsbiologie, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena, Erbertstraße 1, Jena 07743, Germany.
Front Zool. 2014 May 6;11:37. doi: 10.1186/1742-9994-11-37. eCollection 2014.
In spite of considerable work on the linear proportions of limbs in amniotes, it remains unknown whether differences in scale effects between proximal and distal limb segments has the potential to influence locomotor costs in amniote lineages and how changes in the mass proportions of limbs have factored into amniote diversification. To broaden our understanding of how the mass proportions of limbs vary within amniote lineages, I collected data on hindlimb segment masses - thigh, shank, pes, tarsometatarsal segment, and digits - from 38 species of neognath birds, one of the most speciose amniote clades. I scaled each of these traits against measures of body size (body mass) and hindlimb size (hindlimb length) to test for departures from isometry. Additionally, I applied two parameters of trait evolution (Pagel's λ and δ) to understand patterns of diversification in hindlimb segment mass in neognaths.
All segment masses are positively allometric with body mass. Segment masses are isometric with hindlimb length. When examining scale effects in the neognath subclade Land Birds, segment masses were again positively allometric with body mass; however, shank, pedal, and tarsometatarsal segment masses were also positively allometric with hindlimb length. Methods of branch length scaling to detect phylogenetic signal (i.e., Pagel's λ) and increasing or decreasing rates of trait change over time (i.e., Pagel's δ) suffer from wide confidence intervals, likely due to small sample size and deep divergence times.
The scaling of segment masses appears to be more strongly related to the scaling of limb bone mass as opposed to length, and the scaling of hindlimb mass distribution is more a function of scale effects in limb posture than proximo-distal differences in the scaling of limb segment mass. Though negative allometry of segment masses appears to be precluded by the need for mechanically sound limbs, the positive allometry of segment masses relative to body mass may underlie scale effects in stride frequency and length between smaller and larger neognaths. While variation in linear proportions of limbs appear to be governed by developmental mechanisms, variation in mass proportions does not appear to be constrained so.
尽管人们对羊膜动物四肢的线性比例进行了大量研究,但仍不清楚近端和远端肢体节段的尺度效应对羊膜动物谱系的运动成本是否有潜在影响,以及肢体质量比例的变化如何影响羊膜动物的多样化。为了更广泛地了解羊膜动物谱系中肢体质量比例的变化,我收集了 38 种新颌鸟类后肢节段质量(大腿、小腿、跖骨、跗跖骨段和趾骨)的数据,新颌鸟类是羊膜动物中最多样化的类群之一。我将这些特征中的每一个与身体大小(体重)和后肢大小(后肢长度)进行了比例缩放,以测试是否存在等距性偏离。此外,我应用了特征进化的两个参数(Pagel 的 λ 和 δ)来理解新颌鸟类后肢节段质量多样化的模式。
所有节段的质量与体重呈正异速生长。节段质量与后肢长度等距。当检查新颌鸟类亚群地栖鸟类中的尺度效应时,节段质量与体重再次呈正异速生长;然而,小腿、跖骨和跗跖骨段的质量也与后肢长度呈正异速生长。用于检测系统发育信号的分支长度比例缩放方法(即 Pagel 的 λ)和特征随时间变化的增加或减少率(即 Pagel 的 δ)受到宽置信区间的限制,这可能是由于样本量小和分化时间深。
节段质量的比例似乎与肢体骨骼质量的比例更相关,而不是与长度的比例,后肢质量分布的比例与肢体节段质量的比例的远近差异无关,而是与肢体姿势的尺度效应有关。虽然节段质量的负异速生长似乎由于需要机械坚固的肢体而被排除在外,但节段质量相对于体重的正异速生长可能是较小和较大新颌鸟类之间步幅频率和长度的尺度效应的基础。虽然肢体线性比例的变化似乎受发育机制的控制,但质量比例的变化似乎不受限制。