Departments of Molecular and Cellular Biology, and Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Harvard University, 16 Divinity Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
Integr Comp Biol. 2021 Sep 8;61(2):385-397. doi: 10.1093/icb/icab030.
Determining how variation in morphology affects animal performance (and ultimately fitness) is key to understanding the complete process of evolutionary adaptation. Long tails have evolved many times in arboreal and semi-arboreal rodents; in deer mice, long tails have evolved repeatedly in populations occupying forested habitat even within a single species (Peromyscus maniculatus). Here, we use a combination of functional modeling, laboratory studies, and museum records to test hypotheses about the function of tail-length variation in deer mice. First, we use computational models, informed by museum records documenting natural variation in tail length, to test whether differences in tail morphology between forest and prairie subspecies can influence performance in behavioral contexts relevant for tail use. We find that the deer- mouse tail plays little role in statically adjusting center of mass or in correcting body pitch and yaw, but rather it can affect body roll during arboreal locomotion. In this context, we find that even intraspecific tail-length variation could result in substantial differences in how much body rotation results from equivalent tail motions (i.e., tail effectiveness), but the relationship between commonly-used metrics of tail-length variation and effectiveness is non-linear. We further test whether caudal vertebra length, number, and shape are associated with differences in how much the tail can bend to curve around narrow substrates (i.e., tail curvature) and find that, as predicted, the shape of the caudal vertebrae is associated with intervertebral bending angle across taxa. However, although forest and prairie mice typically differ in both the length and number of caudal vertebrae, we do not find evidence that this pattern is the result of a functional trade-off related to tail curvature. Together, these results highlight how even simple models can both generate and exclude hypotheses about the functional consequences of trait variation for organismal-level performance.
确定形态变异如何影响动物的表现(最终是适应性)对于理解进化适应的完整过程至关重要。长尾在树栖和半树栖啮齿动物中多次进化;在林栖和草原栖生境中,长尾在同一物种(Peromyscus maniculatus)中多次进化。在这里,我们使用功能建模、实验室研究和博物馆记录的组合来检验有关鹿鼠长尾长度变异功能的假设。首先,我们使用计算模型,这些模型由记录长尾自然变异的博物馆记录提供信息,以检验森林和草原亚种之间尾巴形态差异是否会影响与尾巴使用相关的行为环境中的表现。我们发现,鹿鼠的尾巴在静态调整质心或纠正身体俯仰和偏航方面作用不大,但在树栖运动中可以影响身体滚动。在这种情况下,我们发现即使是种内的尾巴长度变异也会导致尾巴运动产生的身体旋转量有很大差异(即尾巴效率),但常用的尾巴长度变异和效率之间的关系是非线性的。我们进一步测试尾椎长度、数量和形状是否与尾巴能够弯曲到环绕狭窄基质的程度(即尾巴曲率)的差异有关,发现与预测一致,尾椎的形状与跨分类群的椎间弯曲角度有关。然而,尽管森林和草原老鼠通常在尾巴长度和数量上有所不同,但我们没有证据表明这种模式是与尾巴曲率相关的功能权衡的结果。总之,这些结果强调了即使是简单的模型也可以产生和排除有关特征变异对机体表现的功能后果的假设。