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Search: (WFRF:(Hagman Mattias)) srt2:(2015-2019) > Many Paths to a Com...

Many Paths to a Common Destination : Morphological Differentiation of a Functionally Convergent Visual Signal

Hagman, Mattias (author)
Stockholms universitet,Zoologiska institutionen,University of New South Wales, Australia
Ord, Terry J. (author)
 (creator_code:org_t)
University of Chicago Press, 2016
2016
English.
In: American Naturalist. - : University of Chicago Press. - 0003-0147 .- 1537-5323. ; 188:3, s. 306-318
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)
Abstract Subject headings
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  • Understanding the interacting outcomes of selection and historical contingency in shaping adaptive evolution remains a challenge in evolutionary biology. While selection can produce convergent outcomes when species occupy similar environments, the unique history of each species can also influence evolutionary trajectories and result in different phenotypic end points. The question is to what extent historical contingency places species on different adaptive pathways and, in turn, the extent to which we can predict evolutionary outcomes. Among lizards there are several distantly related genera that have independently evolved an elaborate extendible dewlap for territorial communication. We conducted a detailed morphological study and employed new phylogenetic comparative methods to investigate the evolution of the underlying hyoid that powers the extension of the dewlap. This analysis showed that there appear to have been multiple phenotypic pathways for evolving a functionally convergent dewlap. The biomechanical complexity that underlies this morphological structure implies that adaptation should have been constrained to a narrow phenotypic pathway. However, multiple adaptive solutions have been possible in apparent response to a common selection pressure. Thus, the phenotypic outcome that subsequently evolved in different genera seems to have been contingent on the history of the group in question. This blurs the distinction between convergent and historically contingent adaptation and suggests that adaptive phenotypic diversity can evolve without the need for divergent natural selection.

Subject headings

NATURVETENSKAP  -- Biologi (hsv//swe)
NATURAL SCIENCES  -- Biological Sciences (hsv//eng)

Keyword

adaptation
agamidae
convergence
iguanidae
phylogenetic
phylogenetic principal component analysis

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ref (subject category)
art (subject category)

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Hagman, Mattias
Ord, Terry J.
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NATURAL SCIENCES
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Stockholm University

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