Lagothrix and/or Alouatta-em class="EmphasisTypeItalic">Brachyteles clades reflecting homoplasy and ecological and dietary similarities. A phylogenetic signal in the atelid face is important for future studies integrating fossil taxa and supports evidence that congruence between molecular and morphological phylogenetics in primates is module and clade specific." />
Phylogeny, Ecology, and Morphological Evolution in the Atelid Cranium
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  • 作者:Alexander Bjarnason ; Christophe Soligo ; Sarah Elton
  • 关键词:Atelid ; Cranium ; Diet ; Ecology ; Morphology ; Phylogeny
  • 刊名:International Journal of Primatology
  • 出版年:2015
  • 出版时间:June 2015
  • 年:2015
  • 卷:36
  • 期:3
  • 页码:513-529
  • 全文大小:496 KB
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  • 作者单位:Alexander Bjarnason (1)
    Christophe Soligo (1)
    Sarah Elton (2)

    1. Department of Anthropology, University College London, London, WC1H 0BW, UK
    2. Department of Anthropology, Durham University, Durham, DH1 3LE, UK
  • 刊物类别:Biomedical and Life Sciences
  • 刊物主题:Life Sciences
    Evolutionary Biology
    Human Genetics
    Anthropology
  • 出版者:Springer Netherlands
  • ISSN:1573-8604
文摘
Reconstructing evolutionary relationships of living and extinct primate groups requires reliable phylogenetic inference based on morphology, as DNA is rarely preserved in fossil specimens. Atelids (family Atelidae) are a monophyletic clade and one of the three major adaptive radiations of south and central American primates (platyrrhines), including the genera Alouatta, Ateles, Brachyteles, and Lagothrix, and are diverse in morphology, body and brain size, locomotion, diet, social systems, and behavioral ecology. Molecular phylogenetic relationships of the extant atelid genera are well resolved, yet morphological analyses often support alternative phylogenetic relationships to molecular data. We collected geometric morphometric data from the crania of atelid taxa for phylogenetic analysis of the cranium, cranial base, and face and tested the hypotheses that cranial data maintain a phylogenetic signal, cranial base morphology most closely reflects the atelid molecular phylogeny, and facial and overall cranial morphology are shaped by diet and have experienced greater homoplasy. All analyses supported genus monophyly, and facial morphology maintained a strong phylogenetic signal inferring the atelid molecular phylogeny and a sister relationship between Brachyteles and Lagothrix, whereas results from the cranial base and whole cranium supported Ateles-em class="EmphasisTypeItalic">Lagothrix and/or Alouatta-em class="EmphasisTypeItalic">Brachyteles clades reflecting homoplasy and ecological and dietary similarities. A phylogenetic signal in the atelid face is important for future studies integrating fossil taxa and supports evidence that congruence between molecular and morphological phylogenetics in primates is module and clade specific.
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