亚洲、北美洲和南美洲原住民颅面气候适应性的差异与平行。

IF 1.8 3区 医学 Q2 ANATOMY & MORPHOLOGY Journal of Anatomy Pub Date : 2024-08-26 DOI:10.1111/joa.14115
Andrej Evteev, Taisiya Syutkina, Alexandra Grosheva, Patrícia Santos, Silvia Ghirotto, Tsunehiko Hanihara, Mark Hubbe, Lumila Paula Menéndez
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引用次数: 0

摘要

了解气候对颅骨变异的影响对于推断在人类多样化过程中发挥作用的进化机制至关重要。在此,我们提供了一项综合研究,旨在分析生活在亚洲、北美洲和南美洲温带至寒带环境中的高纬度人群的气候与颅骨变异之间的关联。为此,我们编制了一个大型形态计量数据集(N = 2633),并将其与气候和基因组数据相结合。我们通过洲内和洲际两个地理尺度的多重统计检验,测试了气候对面部骨骼、鼻突和颅穹的影响。我们发现,生活在寒冷地区的种群具有共同的形态模式,其特点是鼻高、面部和眼眶的高度和宽度增加,面部突出减少,颅顶更大、更长和更低。此外,还有一些独特的特征;在整个样本中,来自北亚的人群的鼻子最高、脸最大、颅穹也最大。亚洲人的鼻翼宽度值较小,南美人的鼻翼宽度值较大,而北美洲北极地区的鼻翼宽度值变化不大。生活在高纬度地区的人群的形态模式可能是平行适应的结果,生理学、形态计量学、生态学和遗传学的解释都支持这种结果,而幅度和表型表现的差异可能是由于不同的人群历史、气候的严重程度和文化策略造成的。总之,我们的研究表明,气候是影响现代人类形态的一个相关因素,在研究现代人类进化和多样化时应该考虑到这一点。
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Disparate and parallel craniofacial climatic adaptations in native populations of Asia, North America, and South America

Understanding the impact that climate had in shaping cranial variation is critical for inferring the evolutionary mechanisms that played a role in human diversification. Here, we provide a comprehensive study aiming to analyze the association between climate and cranial variation of high latitude populations living in temperate to cold environments of Asia, North America, and South America. For this, we compiled a large morphometric dataset (N = 2633), which was combined with climatic and genomic data. We tested the influence of climate on the facial skeleton, nasal protrusion, and cranial vault and through multiple statistical tests at two geographical scales: intracontinental and intercontinental. We show that populations living in cold areas share a morphological pattern characterized by an increase in nasal height, facial and orbital heights and widths, a decrease in facial protrusion, and larger, longer, and lower cranial vaults. There are also distinctive features; populations from north Asia present the tallest noses, largest faces, and cranial vaults of the whole sample. Nasal breadth dimensions show small values in Asians, large values in South Americans, and non-significant changes in arctic North America. The morphological pattern in populations living at high latitude may be the result of parallel adaptation, as supported by physiological, morphometric, ecological, and genetic explanations, while the differences in magnitude and phenotypic expression could be due to the diverse population histories, severity of climate, and cultural strategies. Overall, our study shows that climate is a relevant factor shaping modern human morphology and it should be considered when studying modern human evolution and diversification.

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来源期刊
Journal of Anatomy
Journal of Anatomy 医学-解剖学与形态学
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
8.30%
发文量
183
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Anatomy is an international peer-reviewed journal sponsored by the Anatomical Society. The journal publishes original papers, invited review articles and book reviews. Its main focus is to understand anatomy through an analysis of structure, function, development and evolution. Priority will be given to studies of that clearly articulate their relevance to the anatomical community. Focal areas include: experimental studies, contributions based on molecular and cell biology and on the application of modern imaging techniques and papers with novel methods or synthetic perspective on an anatomical system. Studies that are essentially descriptive anatomy are appropriate only if they communicate clearly a broader functional or evolutionary significance. You must clearly state the broader implications of your work in the abstract. We particularly welcome submissions in the following areas: Cell biology and tissue architecture Comparative functional morphology Developmental biology Evolutionary developmental biology Evolutionary morphology Functional human anatomy Integrative vertebrate paleontology Methodological innovations in anatomical research Musculoskeletal system Neuroanatomy and neurodegeneration Significant advances in anatomical education.
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