Comparative morphology in the context of facial reduction: Modularity in primate, dog, and bat crania

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q2 ANATOMY & MORPHOLOGY Journal of Morphology Pub Date : 2024-08-07 DOI:10.1002/jmor.21759
Molly C. Selba, Federico R. Vilaplana Grosso, Valerie B. DeLeon
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Abstract

Biological variation in the mammalian skull is the product of a series of factors including changes in gene expression, developmental timing, and environmental pressures. When considering the diversity of extant mammalian crania, it is important to understand these mechanisms that contribute to cranial growth and in turn, how differences in cranial morphology have been attained. Various researchers, including Dr. Sue Herring, have proposed a variety of mechanisms to explain the process of cranial growth. This work has set the foundation on which modern analysis of craniofacial morphology happens today. This study focused on the analysis of modularity in three mammalian taxa, all of which exhibit facial reduction. Specifically, we examined facial reduction as a morphological phenomenon through the use of two-module and six-module modularity hypotheses. We recorded three-dimensional coordinate data for 55 cranial landmarks that allowed us to analyze differences in cranial shape in these three taxa (primates n = 88, bats n = 64, dogs n = 81). When assessing modularity within the two-module modularity hypothesis specifically, dogs exhibited the lowest levels of modularity, while bats and primates both showed a slightly more modular covariance structure. We further assessed modularity in the same sample using the Goswami six-module model, where again dogs exhibited a low degree of modularity, with bats and primates being more moderate. We then broke the sample into subsets by analyzing each morphotype separately. We hypothesized that the modularity would be more pronounced in the brachycephalic morphotype. Surprisingly, we found that in brachycephalic dogs, normocephalic dogs, brachycephalic primates, and normocephalic primates, there was a moderate degree of modularity. Brachycephalic bats had a low degree of modularity, while normocephalic bats were the most modular group observed in this study. Based on these results, it is evident that facial reduction is a complex and multifaceted phenomenon with unique morphological changes observed in each of the three taxa studied.

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面部缩小背景下的比较形态学:灵长类、狗和蝙蝠颅骨的模块化。
哺乳动物头骨的生物变异是一系列因素的产物,包括基因表达、发育时间和环境压力的变化。在考虑现存哺乳动物头骨的多样性时,重要的是要了解这些导致头骨生长的机制,以及头骨形态差异是如何形成的。包括苏-赫林(Sue Herring)博士在内的多位研究人员提出了多种机制来解释颅骨的生长过程。这些研究成果奠定了现代颅面形态分析的基础。本研究重点分析了三个哺乳动物类群的模块化,这些类群都表现出面部缩小。具体来说,我们通过使用双模块和六模块模块化假说来研究面部缩小这一形态现象。我们记录了 55 个颅骨地标的三维坐标数据,从而分析了这三个类群(灵长类 88 个,蝙蝠 64 个,狗 81 个)颅骨形状的差异。在具体评估双模块化假说中的模块化程度时,狗的模块化程度最低,而蝙蝠和灵长类动物的协方差结构的模块化程度略高。我们使用戈斯瓦米六模块模型进一步评估了同一样本的模块化程度,狗的模块化程度同样较低,而蝙蝠和灵长类动物的模块化程度较为适中。然后,我们将样本分成若干子集,分别分析每种形态类型。我们假设,模块化在腕足动物形态中会更加明显。出乎意料的是,我们发现在双脑狗、常脑狗、双脑灵长类动物和常脑灵长类动物中,都存在中等程度的模块化。蝙蝠的模块化程度较低,而正常头蝙蝠是本研究中观察到的模块化程度最高的群体。根据这些结果,面部缩小显然是一种复杂的多方面现象,在所研究的三个类群中,每个类群都有独特的形态变化。
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来源期刊
Journal of Morphology
Journal of Morphology 医学-解剖学与形态学
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
6.70%
发文量
119
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Morphology welcomes articles of original research in cytology, protozoology, embryology, and general morphology. Articles generally should not exceed 35 printed pages. Preliminary notices or articles of a purely descriptive morphological or taxonomic nature are not included. No paper which has already been published will be accepted, nor will simultaneous publications elsewhere be allowed. The Journal of Morphology publishes research in functional, comparative, evolutionary and developmental morphology from vertebrates and invertebrates. Human and veterinary anatomy or paleontology are considered when an explicit connection to neontological animal morphology is presented, and the paper contains relevant information for the community of animal morphologists. Based on our long tradition, we continue to seek publishing the best papers in animal morphology.
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