Viacava Pietro, Blomberg Simone P, Sansalone Gabriele, Phillips Matthew J, Guillerme Thomas, Cameron Skye F, Wilson Robbie S, Weisbecker Vera
School of Biological Sciences The University of Queensland St. Lucia QLD Australia.
Form, Evolution and Anatomy Research Laboratory, Zoology School of Environmental and Rural Sciences University of New England Armidale NSW Australia.
Ecol Evol. 2020 Aug 18;10(18):9707-9720. doi: 10.1002/ece3.6593. eCollection 2020 Sep.
The biogeographic distribution of diversity among populations of threatened mammalian species is generally investigated using population genetics. However, intraspecific phenotypic diversity is rarely assessed beyond taxonomy-focused linear measurements or qualitative descriptions. Here, we use a technique widely used in the evolutionary sciences-geometric morphometrics-to characterize shape diversity in the skull of an endangered marsupial, the northern quoll, across its 5,000 km distribution range along Northern Australia. Skull shape is a proxy for feeding, behavior, and phenotypic differentiation, allowing us to ask whether populations can be distinguished and whether patterns of variation indicate adaptability to changing environmental conditions. We analyzed skull shape in 101 individuals across four mainland populations and several islands. We assessed the contribution of population, size, sex, rainfall, temperature, and geography to skull shape variation using principal component analysis, Procrustes ANOVA, and variation partitioning analyses. The populations harbor similar amounts of broadly overlapping skull shape variation, with relatively low geographic effects. Size predicted skull shape best, coinciding with braincase size variation and differences in zygomatic arches. Size-adjusted differences in populations explained less variation with far smaller effect sizes, relating to changes in the insertion areas of masticatory muscles, as well as the upper muzzle and incisor region. Climatic and geographic variables contributed little. Strikingly, the vast majority of shape variation-76%-remained unexplained. Our results suggest a uniform intraspecific scope for shape variation, possibly due to allometric constraints or phenotypic plasticity beyond the relatively strong allometric effect. The lack of local adaptation indicates that cross-breeding between populations will not reduce local morphological skull (and probably general musculoskeletal) adaptation because none exists. However, the potential for heritable morphological variation (e.g., specialization to local diets) seems exceedingly limited. We conclude that 3D geometric morphometrics can provide a comprehensive, statistically rigorous phenomic contribution to genetic-based conservation studies.
通常使用种群遗传学来研究受威胁哺乳动物物种种群间多样性的生物地理分布。然而,除了以分类学为重点的线性测量或定性描述外,种内表型多样性很少得到评估。在这里,我们使用一种在进化科学中广泛使用的技术——几何形态测量学,来描述一种濒危有袋动物——北方袋鼬,在其沿澳大利亚北部5000公里分布范围内的头骨形状多样性。头骨形状是摄食、行为和表型分化的一个指标,这使我们能够探究种群是否可以被区分,以及变异模式是否表明对不断变化的环境条件的适应性。我们分析了来自四个大陆种群和几个岛屿的101个个体的头骨形状。我们使用主成分分析、普氏方差分析和变异分配分析,评估了种群、体型、性别、降雨量、温度和地理位置对头骨形状变异的贡献。这些种群具有相似数量的广泛重叠的头骨形状变异,地理效应相对较小。体型对头骨形状的预测效果最佳,这与脑壳大小的变化以及颧弓的差异相吻合。种群间经体型调整后的差异解释的变异较少,效应大小也小得多,这与咀嚼肌插入区域以及上吻部和门齿区域的变化有关。气候和地理变量的贡献很小。引人注目的是,绝大多数形状变异(76%)仍无法得到解释。我们的结果表明,种内形状变异的范围是一致的,这可能是由于异速生长限制或相对较强的异速生长效应之外的表型可塑性。缺乏局部适应性表明,种群间的杂交不会降低局部形态头骨(可能还有一般肌肉骨骼)的适应性,因为根本不存在这种适应性。然而,可遗传形态变异(例如,对当地饮食的特化)的潜力似乎极其有限。我们得出结论,三维几何形态测量学可以为基于遗传学的保护研究提供全面、统计严格的表型贡献。