Schwenk K
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs 06269-3043.
Brain Behav Evol. 1993;41(3-5):124-37. doi: 10.1159/000113830.
Recent advances in the field of squamate reptile chemoreception have been paralleled by the growth and preeminence of cladistics in the field of systematics, but for the most part, workers in the former have failed to incorporate the conceptual and informational advances of the latter. In this paper, I attempt a preliminary rapprochement by combining the methods of phylogenetic systematics and current hypotheses of squamate relationships with an overview of squamate chemosensory biology. This purely phylogenetic approach leads to a number of falsifiable generalizations about the evolution of chemoreception in squamates: 1) Evolution of this system is conservative rather than plastic, reflecting to a large extent suprafamilial attributes rather than adaptation to local conditions; 2) Anguimorphs are highly chemosensory and teiids show convergence with this group; 3) Tongue-flicking, a bifurcated tongue tip, a vomeronasal (VNO) mushroom body, and a complete circular muscle system in the tongue are a correlated character complex associated with the attainment, in squamates, of a direct VNO-oral connection and the loss of a VNO-nasal connection; 4) There is little support for a visual-chemosensory dichotomy within Squamata; 5) Gekkotans are allied with Autarchoglossa, both phylogenetically and in terms of chemosensory biology; 6) Iguania are highly variable in chemosensory development; iguanids represent the primitive iguanian condition, while agamids and chamaeleonids have secondarily reduced or lost their chemosensory abilities; 7) Apparent contradictions in chemosensory behavior among iguanids probably represent intrafamilial divergence; 8) Ecological correlates within Iguanidae and other taxa might be spurious, resulting from historical factors unrelated to the adaptations in question; 9) The mechanical demands of lingual food prehension have constrained chemosensory evolution in Iguania; chemosensory evolution within Scleroglossa was permitted by the liberation of the tongue from this ancestral role.
有鳞目爬行动物化学感受领域的最新进展与系统发育学领域中分支系统学的发展和卓越地位并行,但在很大程度上,前者的研究人员未能吸收后者在概念和信息方面的进展。在本文中,我尝试通过将系统发育系统学方法和有鳞目关系的当前假说与有鳞目化学感觉生物学概述相结合,进行初步的和解。这种纯粹的系统发育方法得出了一些关于有鳞目化学感受进化的可证伪的概括:1)该系统的进化是保守的而非可塑性的,在很大程度上反映了超科级特征而非对当地条件的适应;2)蛇蜥亚目具有高度的化学感受性,而美洲蜥蜴科与该类群表现出趋同;3)舔舌、分叉的舌尖、犁鼻器(VNO)蘑菇体以及舌部完整的环形肌肉系统是一个相关的特征复合体,与有鳞目动物实现直接的犁鼻器 - 口腔连接以及犁鼻器 - 鼻腔连接的丧失相关;4)在有鳞目内部,视觉 - 化学感受二分法几乎没有依据;5)壁虎类在系统发育和化学感觉生物学方面都与硬舌亚目相关联;6)鬣蜥亚目的化学感觉发育高度可变;鬣蜥科代表了原始的鬣蜥状态,而agamids和避役科则次生地降低或丧失了它们的化学感觉能力;7)鬣蜥科动物之间化学感觉行为的明显矛盾可能代表科内分歧;8)鬣蜥科和其他分类群中的生态相关性可能是虚假的,是由与所讨论的适应无关的历史因素导致的;9)舌部抓取食物的机械需求限制了鬣蜥亚目的化学感觉进化;硬舌亚目的化学感觉进化是由于舌头从这种原始角色中解放出来而得以实现的。