灵长类颅骨生物力学中的性别二形性和不同进化途径:理论形态学框架的启示》。

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q2 ANATOMY & MORPHOLOGY Journal of Morphology Pub Date : 2024-10-09 DOI:10.1002/jmor.21780
Z. Jack Tseng, Claire E. Terhune
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引用次数: 0

摘要

哺乳纲灵长目动物在体型和表型方面普遍存在性二型现象。尽管人们一再猜测灵长类动物的性别大小二形性要么促进了雄性和雌性与环境互动的功能差异,要么部分是由这种差异驱动的,但很少有研究直接评估性别二形性对表现特征的影响。在这里,我们使用一个理论形态学框架来证明灵长类颅骨的性别二形性与不同的生物力学表现特征有关。二态性程度是两性生物力学特征差异的一个重要协变量。雄性动物的颅骨形状效率较低但较硬,其生物力学性能的进化异构性显著,而雌性动物在其体型范围内保持性能的稳定性。雌性的效率进化率较高,而雄性则强调与体型相关的颅骨硬度。这些发现支持了咀嚼系统性能中与性别相关的分叉假说:雄性颅骨更大、体型进化更快,部分弥补了低效率的不足,并反映出不再强调机械杠杆作用,而雌性颅骨总体上保持较高的机械效率,并在基于臼齿的咀嚼性能方面进化更快。体型二态与颅骨机械性能之间的进化制衡可能是灵长类表型进化的一个更重要的驱动因素,这一点迄今尚未得到重视。
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Sexual Dimorphism and Divergent Evolutionary Pathways in Primate Cranial Biomechanics: Insights From a Theoretical Morphology Framework

The mammalian order Primates is known for widespread sexual dimorphism in size and phenotype. Despite repeated speculation that primate sexual size dimorphism either facilitates or is in part driven by functional differences in how males and females interact with their environments, few studies have directly assessed the influence of sexual dimorphism on performance traits. Here, we use a theoretical morphology framework to show that sexual dimorphism in primate crania is associated with divergent biomechanical performance traits. The degree of dimorphism is a significant covariate in biomechanical trait divergence between sexes. Males exhibit less efficient but stiffer cranial shapes and significant evolutionary allometry in biomechanical performance, whereas females maintain performance stability across their size spectrum. Evolutionary rates are elevated for efficiency in females whereas males emphasize size-dependent cranial stiffness. These findings support a hypothesis of sex-linked bifurcation in masticatory system performance: larger male crania and faster size evolution partially compensate for low efficiency and reflect a de-emphasis of mechanical leverage, whereas female crania maintain higher mechanical efficiency overall and evolve more rapidly in molar-based masticatory performance. The evolutionary checks-and-balances between size dimorphism and cranial mechanical performance may be a more important driver of primate phenotypic evolution than has been hitherto appreciated.

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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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