Vidal-García Marta, Scott Keogh J
Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, Canberra, Australia.
BMC Evol Biol. 2017 Jul 10;17(1):165. doi: 10.1186/s12862-017-0993-0.
Quantifying morphological diversity across taxa can provide valuable insight into evolutionary processes, yet its complexities can make it difficult to identify appropriate units for evaluation. One of the challenges in this field is identifying the processes that drive morphological evolution, especially when accounting for shape diversification across multiple structures. Differential levels of co-varying phenotypic diversification can conceal selective pressures on traits due to morphological integration or modular shape evolution of different structures, where morphological evolution of different modules is explained either by co-variation between them or by independent evolution, respectively.
Here we used a 3D geometric morphometric approach with x-ray micro CT scan data of the skull and bones of forelimbs and hindlimbs of representative species from all 21 genera of the ancient Australo-Papuan myobatrachid frogs and analysed their shape both as a set of distinct modules and as a multi-modular integrative structure. We then tested three main questions: (i) are evolutionary patterns and the amount and direction of morphological changes similar in different structures and subfamilies?, (ii) do skulls and limbs show different levels of integration?, and (iii) is morphological diversity of skulls and limbs shaped by diet, locomotion, burrowing behavior, and ecology?.
Our results in both skulls and limbs support a complex evolutionary pattern typical of an adaptive radiation with an early burst of phenotypic variation followed by slower rates of morphological change. Skull shape diversity was phylogenetically conserved and correlated with diet whereas limb shape was more labile and associated with diet, locomotion, and burrowing behaviour. Morphological changes between different limb bones were highly correlated, depicting high morphological integration. In contrast, overall limb and skull shape displayed semi-independence in morphological evolution, indicating modularity.
Our results illustrate how morphological diversification in animal clades can follow complex processes, entailing selective pressures from the environment as well as multiple trait covariance with varying degrees of independence across different structures. We suggest that accurately quantifying shape diversity across multiple structures is crucial in order to understand complex evolutionary processes.
量化不同分类群之间的形态多样性能够为进化过程提供有价值的见解,但其复杂性可能使得难以确定合适的评估单位。该领域的挑战之一是识别驱动形态进化的过程,尤其是在考虑多个结构的形状多样化时。不同水平的协变表型多样化可能会掩盖由于不同结构的形态整合或模块形状进化而对性状产生的选择压力,其中不同模块的形态进化分别由它们之间的协变或独立进化来解释。
在这里,我们使用三维几何形态测量方法,利用来自古代澳大拉西亚 - 巴布亚肌蛙科所有21个属的代表性物种的头骨、前肢和后肢骨骼的X射线显微CT扫描数据,并将它们的形状作为一组不同的模块以及一个多模块整合结构进行分析。然后我们测试了三个主要问题:(i)不同结构和亚科的进化模式以及形态变化的数量和方向是否相似?(ii)头骨和四肢是否表现出不同程度的整合?(iii)头骨和四肢的形态多样性是否由饮食、运动、挖掘行为和生态塑造?
我们在头骨和四肢方面的结果都支持一种典型的适应性辐射的复杂进化模式,即早期有一阵表型变异的爆发,随后是较慢的形态变化速率。头骨形状多样性在系统发育上是保守的,并且与饮食相关,而肢体形状更不稳定,与饮食、运动和挖掘行为相关。不同肢体骨骼之间的形态变化高度相关,显示出高度的形态整合。相比之下,整体肢体和头骨形状在形态进化中表现出半独立性,表明存在模块性。
我们的结果说明了动物类群中的形态多样化如何遵循复杂的过程,这需要来自环境的选择压力以及不同结构之间具有不同程度独立性的多个性状协变。我们认为,准确量化多个结构的形状多样性对于理解复杂的进化过程至关重要。