Literature DB >> 28472434

Lineage Diversity and Size Disparity in Musteloidea: Testing Patterns of Adaptive Radiation Using Molecular and Fossil-Based Methods.

Chris J Law1, Graham J Slater2, Rita S Mehta1.   

Abstract

Adaptive radiation is hypothesized to be a primary mechanism that drives the remarkable species diversity and morphological disparity across the Tree of Life. Tests for adaptive radiation in extant taxa are traditionally estimated from calibrated molecular phylogenies with little input from extinct taxa. With 85 putative species in 33 genera and over 400 described extinct species, the carnivoran superfamily Musteloidea is a prime candidate to investigate patterns of adaptive radiation using both extant- and fossil-based macroevolutionary methods. The species diversity and equally impressive ecological and phenotypic diversity found across Musteloidea is often attributed to two adaptive radiations coinciding with two major climate events, the Eocene-Oligocene transition and the Mid-Miocene Climate Transition. Here, we compiled a novel time-scaled phylogeny for 88% of extant musteloids and used it as a framework for testing the predictions of adaptive radiation hypotheses with respect to rates of lineage diversification and phenotypic evolution. Contrary to expectations, we found no evidence for rapid bursts of lineage diversification at the origin of Musteloidea, and further analyses of lineage diversification rates using molecular and fossil-based methods did not find associations between rates of lineage diversification and the Eocene-Oligocene transition or Mid-Miocene Climate Transition as previously hypothesized. Rather, we found support for decoupled diversification dynamics driven by increased clade carrying capacity in the branches leading to a subclade of elongate mustelids. Supporting decoupled diversification dynamics between the subclade of elongate mustelids and the ancestral musteloid regime is our finding of increased rates of body length evolution, but not body mass evolution, within the decoupled mustelid subclade. The lack of correspondence in rates of body mass and length evolution suggest that phenotypic evolutionary rates under a single morphological metric, even one as influential as mass, may not capture the evolution of diversity in clades that exhibit elongate body shapes. The discordance in evolutionary rates between body length and body mass along with evidence of decoupled diversification dynamics suggests that body elongation might be an innovation for the exploitation of novel Mid-Miocene resources, resulting in the radiation of some musteloids.
© The Author(s) 2017. Published by Oxford University Press, on behalf of the Society of Systematic Biologists. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Carnivora; adaptive radiation; body size evolution; evolutionary rates; key innovation; lineage diversification; phylogeny

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 28472434     DOI: 10.1093/sysbio/syx047

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Syst Biol        ISSN: 1063-5157            Impact factor:   15.683


  10 in total

1.  Evolutionary shifts in extant mustelid (Mustelidae: Carnivora) cranial shape, body size and body shape coincide with the Mid-Miocene Climate Transition.

Authors:  Chris J Law
Journal:  Biol Lett       Date:  2019-05-29       Impact factor: 3.703

2.  Ecology and Infection Dynamics of Multi-Host Amdoparvoviral and Protoparvoviral Carnivore Pathogens.

Authors:  Marta Canuti; Melissa Todd; Paige Monteiro; Kalia Van Osch; Richard Weir; Helen Schwantje; Ann P Britton; Andrew S Lang
Journal:  Pathogens       Date:  2020-02-15

3.  Functional Morphology and Morphological Diversification of Hind Limb Cross-Sectional Traits in Mustelid Mammals.

Authors:  P Parsi-Pour; B M Kilbourne
Journal:  Integr Org Biol       Date:  2020-01-08

4.  Evolutionary history of Carnivora (Mammalia, Laurasiatheria) inferred from mitochondrial genomes.

Authors:  Alexandre Hassanin; Géraldine Veron; Anne Ropiquet; Bettine Jansen van Vuuren; Alexis Lécu; Steven M Goodman; Jibran Haider; Trung Thanh Nguyen
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-02-16       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 5.  Coronaviruses Associated with the Superfamily Musteloidea.

Authors:  Alison E Stout; Qinghua Guo; Jean K Millet; Ricardo de Matos; Gary R Whittaker
Journal:  mBio       Date:  2021-01-19       Impact factor: 7.867

6.  The impact of environmental factors on the evolution of brain size in carnivorans.

Authors:  M Michaud; S L D Toussaint; E Gilissen
Journal:  Commun Biol       Date:  2022-09-21

7.  Morphological diversification of biomechanical traits: mustelid locomotor specializations and the macroevolution of long bone cross-sectional morphology.

Authors:  Brandon M Kilbourne; John R Hutchinson
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2019-01-30       Impact factor: 3.260

8.  New insights into the giant mustelids (Mammalia, Carnivora, Mustelidae) from Langebaanweg fossil site (West Coast Fossil Park, South Africa, early Pliocene).

Authors:  Alberto Valenciano; Romala Govender
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2020-06-01       Impact factor: 2.984

9.  Cranial shape variation in mink: Separating two highly similar species.

Authors:  Eloy Gálvez-López; Brandon Kilbourne; Philip G Cox
Journal:  J Anat       Date:  2021-09-26       Impact factor: 2.610

10.  Mandible shape variation and feeding biomechanics in minks.

Authors:  Eloy Gálvez-López; Philip G Cox
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-03-23       Impact factor: 4.379

  10 in total

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