info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Integration and diversity of the caviomorph mandible (Rodentia: Hystricomorpha): Assessing the evolutionary history through fossils and ancestral shape reconstructions
Fecha
2019-10Registro en:
Alvarez, Alicia; Ercoli, Marcos Darío; Verzi, Diego Hector; Integration and diversity of the caviomorph mandible (Rodentia: Hystricomorpha): Assessing the evolutionary history through fossils and ancestral shape reconstructions; Wiley Blackwell Publishing, Inc; Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society; 188; 1; 10-2019; 276-301
0024-4082
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Alvarez, Alicia
Ercoli, Marcos Darío
Verzi, Diego Hector
Resumen
Caviomorph rodents constitute a highly diverse clade of Neotropical mammals. They are recorded since at least the late Middle Eocene and have a long and complex evolutionary history. Using geometric morphometric data, we analysed the variation in mandibular shape of this clade through integration analyses, allometry and shape optimizations onto a phylogenetic tree of 104 extant and extinct species. The analyses of shape variation revealed a strong influence of phylogenetic structure and life habits. A remarkable allometric effect was observed for specific mandibular traits. Morphological changes occurring in the alveolar and muscular functional units were moderately associated. Interestingly, the coordinated evolution of these two functional units was decoupled in the clade of extant abrocomids. A sequential and nearly synchronic acquisition of convergent traits has occurred in chinchillids and derived cavioids since at least the early Middle Oligocene, probably derived from grass-feeding habits or similar adaptations to other abrasive items. Convergences between fossorial taxa evolved in two main events through the Oligocene and middle Late Miocene. Morphological analysis of the fossil representatives allowed a better understanding of the timing of trait acquisitions during the evolutionary history of caviomorphs and its relationship with global and regional palaeoenvironmental changes.