Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA, 95616, U.S.A.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2021 Oct;96(5):1769-1798. doi: 10.1111/brv.12724. Epub 2021 Apr 26.
Marine reptiles and mammals are phylogenetically so distant from each other that their marine adaptations are rarely compared directly. We reviewed ecophysiological features in extant non-avian marine tetrapods representing 31 marine colonizations to test whether there is a common pattern across higher taxonomic groups, such as mammals and reptiles. Marine adaptations in tetrapods can be roughly divided into aquatic and haline adaptations, each of which seems to follow a sequence of three steps. In combination, these six categories exhibit five steps of marine adaptation that apply across all clades except snakes: Step M1, incipient use of marine resources; Step M2, direct feeding in the saline sea; Step M3, water balance maintenance without terrestrial fresh water; Step M4, minimized terrestrial travel and loss of terrestrial feeding; and Step M5, loss of terrestrial thermoregulation and fur/plumage. Acquisition of viviparity is not included because there is no known case where viviparity evolved after a tetrapod lineage colonized the sea. A similar sequence is found in snakes but with the haline adaptation step (Step M3) lagging behind aquatic adaptation (haline adaptation is Step S5 in snakes), most likely because their unique method of water balance maintenance requires a supply of fresh water. The same constraint may limit the maximum body size of fully marine snakes. Steps M4 and M5 in all taxa except snakes are associated with skeletal adaptations that are mechanistically linked to relevant ecophysiological features, allowing assessment of marine adaptation steps in some fossil marine tetrapods. We identified four fossil clades containing members that reached Step M5 outside of stem whales, pinnipeds, sea cows and sea turtles, namely Eosauropterygia, Ichthyosauromorpha, Mosasauroidea, and Thalattosuchia, while five other clades reached Step M4: Saurosphargidae, Placodontia, Dinocephalosaurus, Desmostylia, and Odontochelys. Clades reaching Steps M4 and M5, both extant and extinct, appear to have higher species diversity than those only reaching Steps M1 to M3, while the total number of clades is higher for the earlier steps. This suggests that marine colonizers only diversified greatly after they minimized their use of terrestrial resources, with many lineages not reaching these advanced steps. Historical patterns suggest that a clade does not advance to Steps M4 and M5 unless these steps are reached early in the evolution of the clade. Intermediate forms before a clade reached Steps M4 and M5 tend to become extinct without leaving extant descendants or fossil evidence. This makes it difficult to reconstruct the evolutionary history of marine adaptation in many clades. Clades that reached Steps M4 and M5 tend to last longer than other marine tetrapod clades, sometimes for more than 100 million years.
海洋爬行动物和哺乳动物在系统发育上彼此相距甚远,因此它们的海洋适应性很少直接进行比较。我们回顾了代表 31 次海洋殖民的现存非鸟类海洋四足动物的生态生理学特征,以检验在更高的分类群(如哺乳动物和爬行动物)中是否存在共同的模式。四足动物的海洋适应性大致可分为水生和盐生适应性,每种适应性似乎都遵循三个步骤的序列。综合来看,这六个类别共展示了海洋适应的五个步骤,除了蛇类以外,所有的进化枝都适用:步骤 M1,初步利用海洋资源;步骤 M2,直接在咸海进食;步骤 M3,在没有陆地淡水的情况下维持水平衡;步骤 M4,最大限度地减少陆地旅行和丧失陆地进食;以及步骤 M5,丧失陆地体温调节和皮毛/羽毛。由于没有已知的四足动物谱系在海洋殖民后进化出胎生的情况,因此不包括胎生的获得。在蛇类中也发现了类似的序列,但盐生适应性步骤(步骤 M3)滞后于水生适应性(在蛇类中为盐生适应性是步骤 S5),这很可能是因为它们独特的水平衡维持方法需要淡水供应。同样的限制可能限制了完全海洋蛇类的最大体型。除了蛇类之外,所有分类群的步骤 M4 和 M5 都与骨骼适应性相关,这些适应性在机制上与相关的生态生理学特征相关联,从而可以评估一些化石海洋四足动物的海洋适应步骤。我们确定了四个包含在除了须鲸、鳍足类动物、海牛和海龟之外的达到步骤 M5 的成员的化石进化枝,即真爬行动物、鱼龙形类、沧龙类和楯齿龙类,而另外五个进化枝达到了步骤 M4:Saurosphargidae、Placodontia、Dinocephalosaurus、Desmostylia 和 Odontochelys。达到步骤 M4 和 M5 的进化枝,无论是现存的还是已灭绝的,似乎比仅达到步骤 M1 到 M3 的进化枝具有更高的物种多样性,而早期步骤的进化枝总数更高。这表明,海洋殖民者只有在最大限度地减少对陆地资源的利用后才会大量多样化,许多谱系都没有达到这些高级步骤。历史模式表明,除非在该进化枝的早期就达到了这些步骤,否则一个进化枝不会进化到步骤 M4 和 M5。在一个进化枝达到步骤 M4 和 M5 之前的中间形式往往会灭绝,没有留下现存的后代或化石证据。这使得许多进化枝的海洋适应进化史难以重建。达到步骤 M4 和 M5 的进化枝往往比其他海洋四足动物进化枝持续时间更长,有时超过 1 亿年。