Font Enrique, García-Roa Roberto, Pincheira-Donoso Daniel, Carazo Pau
Ethology Lab, Instituto Cavanilles de Biodiversidad y Biología Evolutiva, University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain,
Ethology Lab, Instituto Cavanilles de Biodiversidad y Biología Evolutiva, University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain.
Brain Behav Evol. 2019;93(4):182-195. doi: 10.1159/000501161. Epub 2019 Aug 22.
Body size correlates with most structural and functional components of an organism's phenotype - brain size being a prime example of allometric scaling with animal size. Therefore, comparative studies of brain evolution in vertebrates rely on controlling for the scaling effects of body size variation on brain size variation by calculating brain weight/body weight ratios. Differences in the brain size-body size relationship between taxa are usually interpreted as differences in selection acting on the brain or its components, while selection pressures acting on body size, which are among the most prevalent in nature, are rarely acknowledged, leading to conflicting and confusing conclusions. We address these problems by comparing brain-body relationships from across >1,000 species of birds and non-avian reptiles. Relative brain size in birds is often assumed to be 10 times larger than in reptiles of similar body size. We examine how differences in the specific gravity of body tissues and in body design (e.g., presence/absence of a tail or a dense shell) between these two groups can affect estimates of relative brain size. Using phylogenetic comparative analyses, we show that the gap in relative brain size between birds and reptiles has been grossly exaggerated. Our results highlight the need to take into account differences between taxa arising from selection pressures affecting body size and design, and call into question the widespread misconception that reptile brains are small and incapable of supporting sophisticated behavior and cognition.
身体大小与生物体表型的大多数结构和功能成分相关——脑容量就是动物体型异速生长缩放的一个主要例子。因此,脊椎动物脑进化的比较研究依赖于通过计算脑重/体重比来控制体型变化对脑容量变化的缩放效应。不同分类群之间脑容量与体型关系的差异通常被解释为作用于大脑或其组成部分的选择差异,而作用于体型的选择压力(自然界中最普遍的压力之一)却很少被考虑,这导致了相互矛盾且令人困惑的结论。我们通过比较1000多种鸟类和非鸟类爬行动物的脑体关系来解决这些问题。人们通常认为,鸟类的相对脑容量比体型相似的爬行动物大10倍。我们研究了这两组动物在身体组织比重和身体设计(例如有无尾巴或致密外壳)方面的差异如何影响相对脑容量的估计。通过系统发育比较分析,我们发现鸟类和爬行动物在相对脑容量上的差距被严重夸大了。我们的研究结果强调了有必要考虑影响体型和身体设计的选择压力所导致的不同分类群之间的差异,并对爬行动物大脑小且无法支持复杂行为和认知这一普遍误解提出质疑。