Rothier Priscila S, Herrel Anthony, Benson Roger B J, Hedrick Brandon P
Department of Biomedical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine at, Cornell University, Ithaca, 14843, USA.
Département Adaptations du Vivant, Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, 75005, France.
BMC Ecol Evol. 2025 Jul 11;25(1):69. doi: 10.1186/s12862-025-02393-9.
Body mass plays a fundamental role in the macroevolutionary dynamics of morphological, ecological, and phylogenetic diversification. Given biomechanical principles, large body masses in terrestrial vertebrates may impose important constraints on the adaptative potential of skeletal morphology. This is especially true for the limbs, which are involved in both supporting and propelling the body during locomotion. We present a novel framework for evaluating how body mass structures patterns of morphological, ecological, and phylogenetic diversification using a dataset of forelimb traits for more than 600 terrestrial mammal species. We found that forelimb shape disparity increases with body mass for mammals generally as well as within mammalian subclades, suggesting that this trend is robust to phylogenetic scale. However, both phylogenetic and locomotor diversity (a proxy for ecological diversity) were high for all except the largest mammals and were not strongly associated with body mass. This suggests that small mammals are capable of speciating widely and evolving novel locomotor modes without requiring drastic changes to forelimb shape. However, as body mass increases, biomechanical constraints require substantial morphological changes to the forelimb to adapt to similar levels of locomotor mode disparity. We also show that different limb bone elements do not respond in the same way to increases in body mass when analyzed individually, perhaps due to differing developmental constraints. We provide new insights on how body mass structures macroevolutionary processes in mammals, and our approach can be generalized to examine this question for a variety of traits, ecological modes, and phylogenetic groups.
体重在形态、生态和系统发育多样化的宏观进化动态中起着根本性作用。根据生物力学原理,陆生脊椎动物的大体型可能会对骨骼形态的适应潜力施加重要限制。对于四肢来说尤其如此,四肢在运动过程中既要支撑身体又要推动身体前进。我们提出了一个新的框架,用于评估体重如何利用600多种陆生哺乳动物物种的前肢特征数据集来构建形态、生态和系统发育多样化的模式。我们发现,一般来说哺乳动物以及哺乳动物亚类中,前肢形状差异会随着体重增加而增大,这表明这种趋势在系统发育尺度上是稳健的。然而,除了最大的哺乳动物外,所有哺乳动物的系统发育多样性和运动多样性(生态多样性的一个代理指标)都很高,并且与体重没有强烈关联。这表明小型哺乳动物能够广泛地形成物种并进化出新的运动模式,而无需对前肢形状进行剧烈改变。然而,随着体重增加,生物力学限制要求前肢有实质性的形态变化以适应类似水平的运动模式差异。我们还表明,当单独分析时,不同的肢体骨骼元素对体重增加的反应方式不同,这可能是由于不同的发育限制所致。我们为体重如何构建哺乳动物的宏观进化过程提供了新的见解,并且我们的方法可以推广到针对各种特征、生态模式和系统发育群体来研究这个问题。