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Patterns of morphological integration in the appendicular skeleton of mammalian carnivores
Author(s) -
MartínSerra Alberto,
Figueirido Borja,
PérezClaros Juan Antonio,
Palmqvist Paul
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.84
H-Index - 199
eISSN - 1558-5646
pISSN - 0014-3820
DOI - 10.1111/evo.12566
Subject(s) - appendicular skeleton , biology , cursorial , skeleton (computer programming) , evolutionary biology , phylogenetic tree , context (archaeology) , postcrania , natural selection , anatomy , zoology , ecology , selection (genetic algorithm) , taxon , paleontology , genetics , artificial intelligence , computer science , predation , gene
We investigated patterns of evolutionary integration in the appendicular skeleton of mammalian carnivores. The findings are discussed in relation to performance selection in terms of organismal function as a potential mechanism underlying integration. Interspecific shape covariation was quantified by two‐block partial least‐squares (2B‐PLS) analysis of 3D landmark data within a phylogenetic context. Specifically, we compared pairs of anatomically connected bones (within‐limbs) and pairs of both serially homologous and functional equivalent bones (between‐limbs). The statistical results of all the comparisons suggest that the carnivoran appendicular skeleton is highly integrated. Strikingly, the main shape covariation relates to bone robustness in all cases. A bootstrap test was used to compare the degree of integration between specialized cursorial taxa (i.e., those whose forelimbs are primarily involved in locomotion) and noncursorial species (i.e., those whose forelimbs are involved in more functions than their hindlimb) showed that cursors have a more integrated appendicular skeleton than noncursors. The findings demonstrate that natural selection can influence the pattern and degree of morphological integration by increasing the degree of bone shape covariation in parallel to ecological specialization.