Testing Convergent and Parallel Adaptations in Talpids Humeral Mechanical Performance by means of Geometric Morphometrics and Finite Element Analysis

Title
Testing Convergent and Parallel Adaptations in Talpids Humeral Mechanical Performance by means of Geometric Morphometrics and Finite Element Analysis
Publication Date
2012-07
Author(s)
Piras, P
Sansalone, G
Teresi, L
Kotsakis, T
Colangelo, P
Loy, A
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons, Inc
Place of publication
United States of America
DOI
10.1002/jmor.20015
UNE publication id
une:1959.11/27559
Abstract
The shape and mechanical performance in Talpidae humeri were studied by means of Geometric Morphometrics and Finite Element Analysis, including both extinct and extant taxa. The aim of this study was to test whether the ability to dig, quantified by humerus mechanical performance, was characterized by convergent or parallel adaptations in different clades of complex tunnel digger within Talpidae, that is, Talpinae+Condylura (monophyletic) and some complex tunnel diggers not belonging to this clade. Our results suggest that the pattern underlying Talpidae humerus evolution is evolutionary parallelism. However, this insight changed to true convergence when we tested an alternative phylogeny based on molecular data, with Condylura moved to a more basal phylogenetic position. Shape and performance analyses, as well as specific comparative methods, provided strong evidence that the ability to dig complex tunnels reached a functional optimum in distantly related taxa. This was also confirmed by the lower phenotypic variance in complex tunnel digger taxa, compared to non‐complex tunnel diggers. Evolutionary rates of phenotypic change showed a smooth deceleration in correspondence with the most recent common ancestor of the Talpinae+Condylura clade.
Link
Citation
Journal of Morphology, 273(7), p. 696-711
ISSN
1097-4687
0362-2525
Pubmed ID
22419178
Start page
696
End page
711

Files:

NameSizeformatDescriptionLink