Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California at Berkeley, 3101 Valley Life Sciences Building, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA.
Department of Biology, Villanova University, 800 Lancaster Avenue, Villanova, PA 19085, USA.
Integr Comp Biol. 2020 Nov 1;60(5):1330-1345. doi: 10.1093/icb/icaa043.
Anurans (frogs and toads) have a unique pelvic and hind limb skeleton among tetrapods. Although their distinct body plan is primarily associated with saltation, anuran species vary in their primary locomotor mode (e.g., walkers, hoppers, jumpers, and swimmers) and are found in a wide array of microhabitats (e.g., burrowing, terrestrial, arboreal, and aquatic) with varying functional demands. Given their largely conserved body plan, morphological adaptation to these diverse niches likely results from more fine-scale morphological change. Our study determines how shape differences in Anura's unique pelvic and hind limb skeletal structures vary with microhabitat, locomotor mode, and jumping ability. Using microCT scans of preserved specimens from museum collections, we added 3D landmarks to the pelvic and hind limb skeleton of 230 anuran species. In addition, we compiled microhabitat and locomotor data from the literature for these species that span 52 of the 55 families of frogs and ∼210 million years of anuran evolution. Using this robust dataset, we examine the relationship between pelvic and hind limb morphology and phylogenetic history, allometry, microhabitat, and locomotor mode. We find pelvic and hind limb changes associated with shifts in microhabitat ("ecomorphs") and locomotor mode ("locomorphs") and directly relate those morphological changes to the jumping ability of individual species. We also reveal how individual bones vary in evolutionary rate and their association with phylogeny, body size, microhabitat, and locomotor mode. Our findings uncover previously undocumented morphological variation related to anuran ecological and locomotor diversification and link that variation to differences in jumping ability among species.
蛙类(青蛙和蟾蜍)在四足动物中具有独特的骨盆和后肢骨骼。尽管它们独特的身体结构主要与跳跃有关,但蛙类物种在主要运动模式(例如步行者、跳跃者、跳跃者和游泳者)上有所不同,并且存在于广泛的微生境(例如,挖掘、陆地、树木和水生)中,具有不同的功能需求。鉴于它们的身体结构基本保持不变,对这些不同生态位的形态适应可能是由于更精细的形态变化。我们的研究确定了蛙类独特的骨盆和后肢骨骼结构的形状差异如何随微生境、运动模式和跳跃能力而变化。我们使用博物馆收藏的保存标本的 microCT 扫描,在 230 种蛙类的骨盆和后肢骨骼上添加了 3D 地标。此外,我们从文献中收集了这些物种的微生境和运动模式数据,这些数据涵盖了青蛙的 55 个科中的 52 个和约 2.1 亿年的蛙类进化史。利用这个强大的数据集,我们研究了骨盆和后肢形态与系统发育历史、比例关系、微生境和运动模式之间的关系。我们发现骨盆和后肢的变化与微生境的变化(“生态型”)和运动模式的变化(“运动型”)有关,并将这些形态变化直接与个别物种的跳跃能力联系起来。我们还揭示了个别骨骼在进化速度上的差异及其与系统发育、体型、微生境和运动模式的关联。我们的研究结果揭示了与蛙类生态和运动多样化相关的以前未记录的形态变化,并将这种变化与物种之间跳跃能力的差异联系起来。