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When a general morphology allows many habitat uses
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作者 María J.TULLI Félix B.CRUZ +1 位作者 Tiana KOHLSDORF Virginia ABDALA 《Integrative Zoology》 SCIE CSCD 2016年第6期483-499,共17页
During the last decades the study of functional morphology received more attention incorporating more detailed data corresponding to the internal anatomy that together contribute for a better understanding of the func... During the last decades the study of functional morphology received more attention incorporating more detailed data corresponding to the internal anatomy that together contribute for a better understanding of the functional basis in locomotion.Here we focus on 2 lizard families,Tropiduridae and Liolaemidae,and use information re­lated to muscle-tendinous and external morphology traits of hind legs.We investigate whether the value of the traits analyzed tend to exhibit a reduced phenotypic variation produced by stabilizing selection,and whether species showing specialization in their habitat use will also exhibit special morphological features related to it.As a result,we identified that evolution of hind limb traits is mainly explained by the Ornstein-Uhlenbeck mod­el,suggesting stabilizing selection.Liolaemids and tropidurids show clear ecomorphological trends in the vari­ables considered,with sand lizards presenting the most specialized morphological traits.Some ecomorphologi­cal trends differ between the 2 lineages,and traits of internal morphology tend to be more flexible than those of external morphology,restricting the ability to identify ecomorphs shared between these 2 lineages.Conservative traits of external morphology likely explain such restriction,as ecomorphs have been historically defined in oth­er lizard clades based on variation of external morphology. 展开更多
关键词 external morphology Lioalemidae muscles TENDON TROPIDURIDAE
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Are the number and size of scales in Liolaemus lizards driven by climate?
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作者 María JoséTULLI Félix BCRUZ 《Integrative Zoology》 SCIE CSCD 2018年第5期579-594,共16页
Ectothermic vertebrates are sensitive to thermal fluctuations in the environments where they occur.To buffer these fluctuations,ectotherms use different strategies,including the integument,which is a barrier that mini... Ectothermic vertebrates are sensitive to thermal fluctuations in the environments where they occur.To buffer these fluctuations,ectotherms use different strategies,including the integument,which is a barrier that minimizes temperature exchange between the inner body and the surrounding air.In lizards,this barrier is constituted by keratinized scales of variable size,shape and texture,and its main function is protection,water loss avoidance and thermoregulation.The size of scales in lizards has been proposed to vary in relation to climatic gradients;however,it has also been observed that in some groups of Iguanian lizards it could be related to phylogeny.Thus,here,we studied the area and number of scales(dorsal and ventral)of 60 species of Liolaemus lizards distributed in a broad latitudinal and altitudinal gradient to determine the nature of the variation of the scales with climate,and found that the number and size of scales are related to climatic variables,such as temperature and geographical variables as altitude.The evolutionary process that best explained how these morphological variables evolved was the Ornstein–Uhlenbeck model.The number of scales seemed to be related to common ancestry,whereas dorsal and ventral scale areas seemed to vary as a consequence of ecological traits.In fact,the ventral area is less exposed to climate conditions such as ultraviolet radiation or wind and is,thus,under less pressure to change in response to alterations in external conditions.It is possible that scale ornamentation,such as keels and granulosity,may bring some more information in this regard. 展开更多
关键词 climate variables habitat use Lioalemidae scale traits
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