Size And Locomotor Ecology Have Differing Effects on the External and Internal Morphologies of Squirrel (Rodentia: Sciuridae) Limb Bones.

IF 2.2 4区 生物学 Q2 BIOLOGY Integrative Organismal Biology Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1093/iob/obad017
J Rickman, A E Burtner, T J Linden, S E Santana, C J Law
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Mammals exhibit a diverse range of limb morphologies that are associated with different locomotor ecologies and structural mechanics. Much remains to be investigated, however, about the combined effects of locomotor modes and scaling on the external shape and structural properties of limb bones. Here, we used squirrels (Sciuridae) as a model clade to examine the effects of locomotor mode and scaling on the external shape and structure of the two major limb bones, the humerus and femur. We quantified humeral and femoral morphologies using 3D geometric morphometrics and bone structure analyses on a sample of 76 squirrel species across their four major ecotypes. We then used phylogenetic generalized linear models to test how locomotor ecology, size, and their interaction influenced morphological traits. We found that size and locomotor mode exhibit different relationships with the external shape and structure of the limb bones, and that these relationships differ between the humerus and femur. External shapes of the humerus and, to a lesser extent, the femur are best explained by locomotor ecology rather than by size, whereas structures of both bones are best explained by interactions between locomotor ecology and scaling. Interestingly, the statistical relationships between limb morphologies and ecotype were lost when accounting for phylogenetic relationships among species under Brownian motion. That assuming Brownian motion confounded these relationships is not surprising considering squirrel ecotypes are phylogenetically clustered; our results suggest that humeral and femoral variation partitioned early between clades and their ecomorphologies were maintained to the present. Overall, our results show how mechanical constraints, locomotor ecology, and evolutionary history may enact different pressures on the shape and structure of limb bones in mammals.

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大小和运动生态学对松鼠(啮齿目:鼠科)肢体骨骼的内外形态有不同的影响。
哺乳动物表现出多种多样的肢体形态,这些形态与不同的运动生态和结构力学有关。然而,关于运动模式和缩放对肢体骨骼外部形状和结构特性的综合影响仍有待研究。本研究以松鼠(Sciuridae)为模型分支,研究了运动模式和缩放对肱骨和股骨这两个主要肢骨外部形状和结构的影响。我们对76种松鼠的4种主要生态型进行了三维几何形态测量和骨骼结构分析,量化了它们的肱骨和股骨形态。然后,我们使用系统发育广义线性模型来测试运动生态学、大小及其相互作用如何影响形态特征。我们发现,大小和运动模式与肢体骨骼的外部形状和结构表现出不同的关系,并且这些关系在肱骨和股骨之间有所不同。肱骨和股骨(在较小程度上)的外部形状最好用运动生态学而不是大小来解释,而两种骨骼的结构最好用运动生态学和尺度之间的相互作用来解释。有趣的是,当考虑布朗运动下物种之间的系统发育关系时,肢体形态和生态型之间的统计关系丢失了。假设布朗运动混淆了这些关系并不奇怪,因为松鼠生态型在系统发育上是聚集的;我们的研究结果表明,肱骨和股骨的变异在进化支之间划分得很早,并且它们的生态形态一直保持到现在。总的来说,我们的研究结果显示了机械约束、运动生态学和进化历史如何对哺乳动物肢骨的形状和结构施加不同的压力。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
6.70%
发文量
48
审稿时长
20 weeks
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