Division of Biological Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO, USA.
Department of Biology, University of Detroit Mercy, Detroit, MI, USA.
Biol Lett. 2024 Feb;20(2):20230419. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2023.0419. Epub 2024 Feb 7.
Elucidating the selective forces shaping the diversity of vertebrate brains continues to be a major area of inquiry, particularly as it relates to cognition. Historically brain evolution was interpreted through the lens of relative brain size; however, recent evidence has challenged this approach. Investigating neuroanatomy at a finer scale, such as neuron number, can provide new insights into the forces shaping brain evolution in the context of information processing capacity. Ecological factors, such as the complexity of a species' habitat, place demands on cognition that could shape neuroanatomy. In this study, we investigate the relationship between neuron number and habitat complexity in three brain regions across six closely related anole species from Puerto Rico. After controlling for brain mass, we found that the number of neurons increased with habitat complexity across species in the telencephalon and 'rest of the brain,' but not in the cerebellum. Our results demonstrate that habitat complexity has shaped neuroanatomy in the Puerto Rican anole radiation and provide further evidence of the role of habitat complexity in vertebrate brain evolution.
阐明塑造脊椎动物大脑多样性的选择压力仍然是一个主要的研究领域,特别是与认知有关。从历史上看,脑进化是通过相对脑大小的视角来解释的;然而,最近的证据对这种方法提出了挑战。在更精细的尺度上研究神经解剖学,如神经元数量,可以为理解在信息处理能力背景下塑造大脑进化的力量提供新的见解。生态因素,如物种栖息地的复杂性,对认知提出了要求,这可能会影响神经解剖学。在这项研究中,我们调查了波多黎各的六种亲缘关系密切的安乐蜥物种的三个脑区的神经元数量与栖息地复杂性之间的关系。在控制脑质量后,我们发现,在端脑和“大脑的其余部分”中,神经元数量随着物种栖息地复杂性的增加而增加,但在小脑则不然。我们的研究结果表明,栖息地复杂性塑造了波多黎各安乐蜥辐射中的神经解剖学,并进一步证明了栖息地复杂性在脊椎动物大脑进化中的作用。