Artículos de revistas
Morphological evolution in Ceratophryinae frogs (Anura, Neobatrachia): The effects of heterochronic changes during larval development and metamorphosis
Fecha
2008-12Registro en:
Fabrezi, Marissa; Quinzio, Silvia Inés; Morphological evolution in Ceratophryinae frogs (Anura, Neobatrachia): The effects of heterochronic changes during larval development and metamorphosis; Wiley Blackwell Publishing, Inc; Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society; 154; 4; 12-2008; 752-780
0024-4082
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Fabrezi, Marissa
Quinzio, Silvia Inés
Resumen
Heterochrony produces morphological change with effects in shape, size, and/or timing of developmental events of a trait related to an ancestral ontogeny. This paper analyzes heterochrony during the ontogeny of Ceratophryinae (Ceratophrys, Chacophrys, and Lepidobatrachus), a monophyletic group of South American frogs with larval development, and uses different approaches to explore their morphological evolution: (1) inferences of ancestral ontogenies and heterochronic variation from a cladistic analysis based on 102 morphological larval and adult characters recorded in ten anuran taxa; (2) comparisons of size, morphological variation, and timing (age) of developmental events based on a study of ontogenetic series of ceratophryines, Telmatobius atacamensis, and Pseudis platensis. We found Chacophrys as the basal taxon. Ceratophrys and Lepidobatrachus share most derived larval features resulting from heterochrony. Ceratophryines share high rates of larval development, but differ in rates of postmetamorphic growth. The ontogeny of Lepidobatrachus exhibits peramorphic traits produced by the early onset of metamorphic transformations that are integrated in an unusual larval morphology. This study represents an integrative examination of shape, size, and age variation, and discusses evolutionary patterns of metamorphosis. © 2008 The Linnean Society of London.