Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

What factors shape rates of phenotypic evolution? A comparative study of cranial morphology of four mammalian clades

2009; Oxford University Press; Volume: 22; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/j.1420-9101.2009.01714.x

ISSN

1420-9101

Autores

Natalie Cooper, Andy Purvis,

Tópico(s)

Morphological variations and asymmetry

Resumo

Understanding why rates of morphological evolution vary is a major goal in evolutionary biology. Classical work suggests that body size, interspecific competition, geographic range size and specialization may all be important, and each may increase or decrease rates of evolution. Here, we investigate correlates of proportional evolutionary rates in phalangeriform possums, phyllostomid bats, platyrrhine monkeys and marmotine squirrels, using phylogenetic comparative methods. We find that the most important correlate is body size. Large species evolve the fastest in all four clades, and there is a nonlinear relationship in platyrrhines and phalangeriformes, with the slowest evolution in species of intermediate size. We also find significant increases in rate with high environmental temperature in phyllostomids, and low mass-specific metabolic rate in marmotine squirrels. The mechanisms underlying these correlations are uncertain and appear to be size specific. We conclude that there is significant variation in rates of evolution, but that its meaning is not yet clear.

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