Department of Anthropology, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR, USA.
Center for Anatomical Sciences, University of North Texas Health Science Center, Fort Worth, TX, USA.
J Anat. 2021 Jun;238(6):1444-1455. doi: 10.1111/joa.13390. Epub 2021 Jan 9.
Obtaining coordinate data for geometric morphometric studies often involves the sampling of dry skeletal specimens from museum collections. But many specimens exhibit damage and/or pathologic conditions. Such specimens can be considered inadequate for the analyses of shape and are excluded from study. However, the influences that damaged specimens may have on the assessment of normal shape variation have only been explored in two-dimensional coordinate data and no studies have addressed the inclusion of pathological specimens to date. We collected three-dimensional coordinate data from the cranium and mandible of 100 crab-eating macaques (Macaca fascicularis). Tests typically employed to analyze shape variation were performed on five datasets that included specimens with varying degrees of damage/pathology. We hypothesized that the inclusion of these specimens into larger datasets would strengthen statistical support for dominant biological predictors of shape, such as sex and size. However, we also anticipated that the analysis of only the most questionable specimens may confound statistical outputs. We then analyzed a small sample of good quality specimens bolstered by specimens that would generally be excluded due to damage or pathologic morphology and compared the results with previous analyses. The inclusion of damaged/pathologic specimens in a larger dataset resulted in increased variation linked to allometry, sexual dimorphism, and covariation, supporting our initial hypothesis. We found that analyzing the most questionable specimens alone gave consistent results for the most dominant aspects of shape but could affect outputs for less influential principal components and predictors. The small dataset bolstered with damaged/pathologic specimens provided an adequate assessment of the major components of shape, but finer scale differences were also identified. We suggest that normal and repeatable variation contributed by specimens exhibiting damage and/or pathology emphasize the dominant components and shape predictors in larger datasets, however, the various unique conditions may be more influential for limited sample sizes. Furthermore, we find that exclusion of damaged/pathologic specimens can, in some cases, omit important demographic-specific shape variation of groups of individuals more likely to exhibit these conditions. These findings provide a strong case for inclusion of these specimens into studies that focus on the dominant aspects of intraspecific shape variation. However, they may present issues when testing hypotheses relating to more fine-scale aspects of morphology.
获取几何形态测量研究的坐标数据通常涉及从博物馆藏品中采集干燥骨骼标本。但是,许多标本都有损伤和/或病理状况。这些标本不适合进行形状分析,因此被排除在研究之外。然而,只有在二维坐标数据中探讨了受损标本对正常形状变化评估的影响,目前尚无研究涉及包括病理标本。我们从 100 只食蟹猕猴(Macaca fascicularis)的颅骨和下颌骨中采集了三维坐标数据。通常用于分析形状变化的测试是在五个数据集上进行的,这些数据集包括具有不同程度损伤/病理的标本。我们假设将这些标本纳入更大的数据集将增强对形状的主要生物学预测因素(如性别和大小)的统计支持。但是,我们也预计,仅分析最有问题的标本可能会使统计结果产生混淆。然后,我们分析了一小部分高质量的标本,并通过因损伤或病理形态而通常被排除在外的标本进行补充,将结果与以前的分析进行了比较。将受损/病理标本纳入更大的数据集导致与异速生长、性二态性和协变相关的变异增加,支持了我们的初始假设。我们发现,仅分析最有问题的标本可以为形状的最主要方面提供一致的结果,但可能会影响影响力较小的主成分和预测因素的输出。用受损/病理标本加强的小数据集提供了对形状主要成分的充分评估,但也确定了更精细的差异。我们建议,表现出损伤和/或病理的标本所表现出的正常和可重复的变异强调了更大数据集的主要成分和形状预测因素,然而,对于有限的样本量,各种独特的条件可能更具影响力。此外,我们发现排除受损/病理标本在某些情况下可能会忽略更可能表现出这些情况的个体群体的重要特定于群体的形状变化。这些发现强烈支持将这些标本纳入专注于种内形状变化主要方面的研究。但是,当测试与形态学更精细方面相关的假设时,它们可能会出现问题。