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On the Relationship between the Macroevolutionary Trajectories of Morphological Integration and Morphological Disparity

How does the organization of phenotypes relate to their propensity to vary? How do evolutionary changes in this organization affect large-scale phenotypic evolution? Over the last decade, studies of morphological integration and modularity have renewed our understanding of the organizational and var...

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Autor principal: Gerber, Sylvain
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3656834/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23691115
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0063913
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author Gerber, Sylvain
author_facet Gerber, Sylvain
author_sort Gerber, Sylvain
collection PubMed
description How does the organization of phenotypes relate to their propensity to vary? How do evolutionary changes in this organization affect large-scale phenotypic evolution? Over the last decade, studies of morphological integration and modularity have renewed our understanding of the organizational and variational properties of complex phenotypes. Much effort has been made to unravel the connections among the genetic, developmental, and functional contexts leading to differential integration among morphological traits and individuation of variational modules. Yet, their macroevolutionary consequences on the dynamics of morphological disparity–the large-scale variety of organismal designs–are still largely unknown. Here, I investigate the relationship between morphological integration and morphological disparity throughout the entire evolutionary history of crinoids (echinoderms). Quantitative analyses of interspecific patterns of variation and covariation among characters describing the stem, cup, arm, and tegmen of the crinoid body do not show any significant concordance between the temporal trajectories of disparity and overall integration. Nevertheless, the results reveal marked differences in the patterns of integration for Palaeozoic and post-Palaeozoic crinoids. Post-Palaeozoic crinoids have a higher degree of integration and occupy a different region of the space of integration patterns, corresponding to more heterogeneously structured matrices of correlation among traits. Particularly, increased covariation is observed between subsets of characters from the dorsal cup and from the arms. These analyses show that morphological disparity is not dependent on the overall degree of evolutionary integration but rather on the way integration is distributed among traits. Hence, temporal changes in disparity dynamics are likely constrained by reorganizations of the modularity of the crinoid morphology and not by changes in the variability of individual traits. The differences in integration patterns explain the more stereotyped morphologies of post-Palaeozoic crinoids and, from a broader macroevolutionary perspective, call for a greater attention to the distributional heterogeneities of constraints in morphospace.
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spelling pubmed-36568342013-05-20 On the Relationship between the Macroevolutionary Trajectories of Morphological Integration and Morphological Disparity Gerber, Sylvain PLoS One Research Article How does the organization of phenotypes relate to their propensity to vary? How do evolutionary changes in this organization affect large-scale phenotypic evolution? Over the last decade, studies of morphological integration and modularity have renewed our understanding of the organizational and variational properties of complex phenotypes. Much effort has been made to unravel the connections among the genetic, developmental, and functional contexts leading to differential integration among morphological traits and individuation of variational modules. Yet, their macroevolutionary consequences on the dynamics of morphological disparity–the large-scale variety of organismal designs–are still largely unknown. Here, I investigate the relationship between morphological integration and morphological disparity throughout the entire evolutionary history of crinoids (echinoderms). Quantitative analyses of interspecific patterns of variation and covariation among characters describing the stem, cup, arm, and tegmen of the crinoid body do not show any significant concordance between the temporal trajectories of disparity and overall integration. Nevertheless, the results reveal marked differences in the patterns of integration for Palaeozoic and post-Palaeozoic crinoids. Post-Palaeozoic crinoids have a higher degree of integration and occupy a different region of the space of integration patterns, corresponding to more heterogeneously structured matrices of correlation among traits. Particularly, increased covariation is observed between subsets of characters from the dorsal cup and from the arms. These analyses show that morphological disparity is not dependent on the overall degree of evolutionary integration but rather on the way integration is distributed among traits. Hence, temporal changes in disparity dynamics are likely constrained by reorganizations of the modularity of the crinoid morphology and not by changes in the variability of individual traits. The differences in integration patterns explain the more stereotyped morphologies of post-Palaeozoic crinoids and, from a broader macroevolutionary perspective, call for a greater attention to the distributional heterogeneities of constraints in morphospace. Public Library of Science 2013-05-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3656834/ /pubmed/23691115 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0063913 Text en © 2013 Sylvain Gerber http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Gerber, Sylvain
On the Relationship between the Macroevolutionary Trajectories of Morphological Integration and Morphological Disparity
title On the Relationship between the Macroevolutionary Trajectories of Morphological Integration and Morphological Disparity
title_full On the Relationship between the Macroevolutionary Trajectories of Morphological Integration and Morphological Disparity
title_fullStr On the Relationship between the Macroevolutionary Trajectories of Morphological Integration and Morphological Disparity
title_full_unstemmed On the Relationship between the Macroevolutionary Trajectories of Morphological Integration and Morphological Disparity
title_short On the Relationship between the Macroevolutionary Trajectories of Morphological Integration and Morphological Disparity
title_sort on the relationship between the macroevolutionary trajectories of morphological integration and morphological disparity
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3656834/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23691115
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0063913
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