Weaver Lucas N, Grossnickle David M
Department of Biology, Life Sciences Building, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
Curr Zool. 2020 Oct;66(5):539-553. doi: 10.1093/cz/zoaa057. Epub 2020 Sep 22.
Selective pressures favor morphologies that are adapted to distinct ecologies, resulting in trait partitioning among ecomorphotypes. However, the effects of these selective pressures vary across taxa, especially because morphology is also influenced by factors such as phylogeny, body size, and functional trade-offs. In this study, we examine how these factors impact functional diversification in mammals. It has been proposed that trait partitioning among mammalian ecomorphotypes is less pronounced at small body sizes due to biomechanical, energetic, and environmental factors that favor a "generalist" body plan, whereas larger taxa exhibit more substantial functional adaptations. We title this the Divergence Hypothesis (DH) because it predicts greater morphological divergence among ecomorphotypes at larger body sizes. We test DH by using phylogenetic comparative methods to examine the postcranial skeletons of 129 species of taxonomically diverse, small-to-medium-sized (<15 kg) mammals, which we categorize as either "tree-dwellers" or "ground-dwellers." In some analyses, the morphologies of ground-dwellers and tree-dwellers suggest greater between-group differentiation at larger sizes, providing some evidence for DH. However, this trend is neither particularly strong nor supported by all analyses. Instead, a more pronounced pattern emerges that is distinct from the predictions of DH: within-group phenotypic disparity increases with body size in both ground-dwellers and tree-dwellers, driven by morphological outliers among "medium"-sized mammals. Thus, evolutionary increases in body size are more closely linked to increases in within-locomotor-group disparity than to increases in between-group disparity. We discuss biomechanical and ecological factors that may drive these evolutionary patterns, and we emphasize the significant evolutionary influences of ecology and body size on phenotypic diversity.
选择压力有利于适应不同生态环境的形态,导致生态形态型之间的性状分化。然而,这些选择压力的影响因分类群而异,特别是因为形态还受到系统发育、体型和功能权衡等因素的影响。在本研究中,我们研究了这些因素如何影响哺乳动物的功能多样化。有人提出,由于有利于“通才”体型计划的生物力学、能量和环境因素,哺乳动物生态形态型之间的性状分化在小体型时不太明显,而较大的分类群表现出更显著的功能适应。我们将此称为分化假说(DH),因为它预测在较大体型时生态形态型之间的形态差异更大。我们通过系统发育比较方法测试DH,研究129种分类多样的中小型(<15千克)哺乳动物的颅后骨骼,我们将其分为“树栖动物”或“地栖动物”。在一些分析中,地栖动物和树栖动物的形态表明,在较大体型时组间分化更大,为DH提供了一些证据。然而,这种趋势既不特别强烈,也没有得到所有分析的支持。相反,出现了一种与DH预测不同的更明显的模式:在“中等”体型的哺乳动物中,形态异常值导致地栖动物和树栖动物组内表型差异均随体型增加。因此,体型的进化增加与运动组内差异的增加比与组间差异的增加更密切相关。我们讨论了可能驱动这些进化模式的生物力学和生态因素,并强调了生态和体型对表型多样性的重大进化影响。