López-Aguirre Camilo, Wilson Laura A B, Koyabu Daisuke, Tu Vuong Tan, Hand Suzanne J
Earth and Sustainability Science Research Centre, School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
School of Archaeology and Anthropology, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
Anat Rec (Hoboken). 2021 Sep;304(9):1937-1952. doi: 10.1002/ar.24620. Epub 2021 Mar 24.
Bats use their forelimbs in different ways, but flight is the most notable example of morphological adaptation. Foraging and roosting specializations beyond flight have also been described in several bat lineages. Understanding postcranial evolution during the locomotory and foraging diversification of bats is fundamental to understanding bat evolution. We investigated whether different foraging and roosting behaviors influenced humeral cross-sectional shape and biomechanical variation, following Wolff's law of bone remodeling. The effect of body size and phylogenetic relatedness was also tested, in order to evaluate multiple sources of variation. Our results suggest strong ecological signal and no phylogenetic structuring in shape and biomechanical variation in humeral phenotypes. Decoupled modes of scaling of shape and biomechanical variation were consistently indicated across foraging and roosting behaviors, suggesting divergent allometric trajectories. Terrestrial locomoting and upstand roosting species showed unique patterns of shape and biomechanical variation across all our analyses, suggesting that these rare behaviors among bats place unique functional demands on the humerus, canalizing phenotypes. Our results suggest that complex and multiple adaptive pathways interplay in the postcranium, leading to the decoupling of different features and regions of skeletal elements optimized for different functional demands. Moreover, our results shed further light on the phenotypical diversification of the wing in bats and how adaptations besides flight could have shaped the evolution of the bat postcranium.
蝙蝠以不同方式使用其前肢,但飞行是形态适应最显著的例子。在几个蝙蝠谱系中也描述了除飞行之外的觅食和栖息特化。了解蝙蝠在运动和觅食多样化过程中的颅后进化对于理解蝙蝠进化至关重要。我们根据沃尔夫骨重塑定律,研究了不同的觅食和栖息行为是否会影响肱骨横截面形状和生物力学变化。还测试了体型和系统发育相关性的影响,以评估多种变异来源。我们的结果表明,肱骨表型的形状和生物力学变化具有强烈的生态信号,且无系统发育结构。在觅食和栖息行为中,形状和生物力学变化的缩放解耦模式一致,表明存在不同的异速生长轨迹。在我们所有的分析中,陆地移动和直立栖息的物种表现出独特的形状和生物力学变化模式,这表明蝙蝠中的这些罕见行为对肱骨提出了独特的功能需求,从而使表型趋于一致。我们的结果表明,复杂且多样的适应性途径在后颅骨中相互作用,导致为不同功能需求而优化的骨骼元素的不同特征和区域解耦。此外,我们的结果进一步揭示了蝙蝠翅膀的表型多样化,以及除飞行之外的适应如何塑造了蝙蝠颅后的进化。