超越头部和翅膀:揭示饮食、体型和系统发育对蝙蝠股骨进化的影响。

IF 1.8 4区 医学 Q2 ANATOMY & MORPHOLOGY Anatomical Record-Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology Pub Date : 2024-08-02 DOI:10.1002/ar.25551
Nathália Siqueira Veríssimo Louzada, William Corrêa Tavares
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引用次数: 0

摘要

蝙蝠科(Phyllostomidae)是新热带蝙蝠中种类最多的科,共有 230 种,它们的饮食习惯和获取食物的方法各不相同。它们的食性多样化通过自然选择塑造了头骨和翅膀形态,反映了食物加工和飞行策略。然而,人们对蝙蝠后肢的进化,尤其是侏儒蝙蝠后肢的进化仍然知之甚少。以前的研究强调股骨的形态是理解山地蝙蝠四足动物进化的关键,包括吸血蝙蝠(Desmodontinae)的善于行走。在此,我们旨在描述蝠科(Phyllostomidae)的股骨形态变异,将其与体型相关联,并评估系统发育历史、饮食习惯和后肢使用的影响。通过系统发育方法分析了9个亚科45个物种的15个股骨特征,我们发现股骨形态具有显著的系统发育结构。计量分析表明,体重约占植食动物股骨大小变异的85%,约占股骨形状变异的11%。在 Stenodermatinae、Lonchophyllinae 和 Glossophaginae 中,股骨相对较小,而在 Phyllostominae、Desmodontinae、Micronycterinae 和 Lonchorrhininae 中,股骨较大。此外,还发现了股骨形状的广泛变异,其中吸血蝙蝠的形态最为独特,其次是食俭蝙蝠。与随机模型相比,与饮食相关的适应性进化模型能更有效地解释股骨相对大小和形状的变化。与蝙蝠股骨功能需求有限的传统观点相反,我们的研究结果表明,股骨形态除了部分受体型和共同进化史的影响外,还受到与饮食和食物捕获相关的功能需求的显著影响。
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Beyond head and wings: Unveiling influence of diet, body size, and phylogeny on the evolution of the femur in phyllostomid bats.

Phyllostomidae, the most diverse family of Neotropical bats, encompass 230 species with varied dietary habits and food acquisition methods. Their feeding niche diversification has shaped skull and wing morphologies through natural selection, reflecting food processing and flight strategies. Yet, evolution of bat hindlimbs, especially in phyllostomids, remains little understood. Previous studies highlighted the femur's morphology as a key to understanding the evolution of quadrupedalism in yangochiropteran bats, including the adept walking observed in vampire bats (Desmodontinae). Here, we aimed to describe the femoral morphological variation in Phyllostomidae, correlating this with body size and assessing the effects of phylogenetic history, dietary habits, and hindlimb usage. Analyzing 15 femoral traits from 45 species across 9 subfamilies through phylogenetically informed methods, we discovered a significant phylogenetic structure in femoral morphology. Allometric analysis indicated that body mass accounts for about 85% of the variance in phyllostomid femoral size and about 11% in femoral shape. Relatively smaller femurs showed to be typical in Stenodermatinae, Lonchophyllinae, and Glossophaginae, in contrast to the larger femurs of Phyllostominae, Desmodontinae, Micronycterinae, and Lonchorrhininae. Furthermore, extensive femur shape variation was detected, with the most distinct morphologies in vampire bats, followed by frugivorous species. Adaptive evolutionary models related to diet more effectively explained variations in femoral relative size and shape than stochastic models. Contrary to the conventional belief of limited functional demand on bat femurs, our findings suggest that femoral morphology is significantly influenced by functional demands associated with diet and food capture, in addition to being partially structured by body size and shared evolutionary history.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
15.00%
发文量
266
审稿时长
4 months
期刊介绍: The Anatomical Record
期刊最新文献
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