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Disproportionate Cochlear Length in Genus Homo Shows a High Phylogenetic Signal during Apes’ Hearing Evolution

Changes in lifestyles and body weight affected mammal life-history evolution but little is known about how they shaped species’ sensory systems. Since auditory sensitivity impacts communication tasks and environmental acoustic awareness, it may have represented a deciding factor during mammal evolut...

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Autores principales: Braga, J., Loubes, J-M., Descouens, D., Dumoncel, J., Thackeray, J. F., Kahn, J-L., de Beer, F., Riberon, A., Hoffman, K., Balaresque, P., Gilissen, E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4471221/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26083484
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0127780
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author Braga, J.
Loubes, J-M.
Descouens, D.
Dumoncel, J.
Thackeray, J. F.
Kahn, J-L.
de Beer, F.
Riberon, A.
Hoffman, K.
Balaresque, P.
Gilissen, E.
author_facet Braga, J.
Loubes, J-M.
Descouens, D.
Dumoncel, J.
Thackeray, J. F.
Kahn, J-L.
de Beer, F.
Riberon, A.
Hoffman, K.
Balaresque, P.
Gilissen, E.
author_sort Braga, J.
collection PubMed
description Changes in lifestyles and body weight affected mammal life-history evolution but little is known about how they shaped species’ sensory systems. Since auditory sensitivity impacts communication tasks and environmental acoustic awareness, it may have represented a deciding factor during mammal evolution, including apes. Here, we statistically measure the influence of phylogeny and allometry on the variation of five cochlear morphological features associated with hearing capacities across 22 living and 5 fossil catarrhine species. We find high phylogenetic signals for absolute and relative cochlear length only. Comparisons between fossil cochleae and reconstructed ape ancestral morphotypes show that Australopithecus absolute and relative cochlear lengths are explicable by phylogeny and concordant with the hypothetized ((Pan,Homo),Gorilla) and (Pan,Homo) most recent common ancestors. Conversely, deviations of the Paranthropus oval window area from these most recent common ancestors are not explicable by phylogeny and body weight alone, but suggest instead rapid evolutionary changes (directional selection) of its hearing organ. Premodern (Homo erectus) and modern human cochleae set apart from living non-human catarrhines and australopiths. They show cochlear relative lengths and oval window areas larger than expected for their body mass, two features corresponding to increased low-frequency sensitivity more recent than 2 million years ago. The uniqueness of the “hypertrophied” cochlea in the genus Homo (as opposed to the australopiths) and the significantly high phylogenetic signal of this organ among apes indicate its usefulness to identify homologies and monophyletic groups in the hominid fossil record.
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spelling pubmed-44712212015-06-29 Disproportionate Cochlear Length in Genus Homo Shows a High Phylogenetic Signal during Apes’ Hearing Evolution Braga, J. Loubes, J-M. Descouens, D. Dumoncel, J. Thackeray, J. F. Kahn, J-L. de Beer, F. Riberon, A. Hoffman, K. Balaresque, P. Gilissen, E. PLoS One Research Article Changes in lifestyles and body weight affected mammal life-history evolution but little is known about how they shaped species’ sensory systems. Since auditory sensitivity impacts communication tasks and environmental acoustic awareness, it may have represented a deciding factor during mammal evolution, including apes. Here, we statistically measure the influence of phylogeny and allometry on the variation of five cochlear morphological features associated with hearing capacities across 22 living and 5 fossil catarrhine species. We find high phylogenetic signals for absolute and relative cochlear length only. Comparisons between fossil cochleae and reconstructed ape ancestral morphotypes show that Australopithecus absolute and relative cochlear lengths are explicable by phylogeny and concordant with the hypothetized ((Pan,Homo),Gorilla) and (Pan,Homo) most recent common ancestors. Conversely, deviations of the Paranthropus oval window area from these most recent common ancestors are not explicable by phylogeny and body weight alone, but suggest instead rapid evolutionary changes (directional selection) of its hearing organ. Premodern (Homo erectus) and modern human cochleae set apart from living non-human catarrhines and australopiths. They show cochlear relative lengths and oval window areas larger than expected for their body mass, two features corresponding to increased low-frequency sensitivity more recent than 2 million years ago. The uniqueness of the “hypertrophied” cochlea in the genus Homo (as opposed to the australopiths) and the significantly high phylogenetic signal of this organ among apes indicate its usefulness to identify homologies and monophyletic groups in the hominid fossil record. Public Library of Science 2015-06-17 /pmc/articles/PMC4471221/ /pubmed/26083484 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0127780 Text en © 2015 Braga et al 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
Braga, J.
Loubes, J-M.
Descouens, D.
Dumoncel, J.
Thackeray, J. F.
Kahn, J-L.
de Beer, F.
Riberon, A.
Hoffman, K.
Balaresque, P.
Gilissen, E.
Disproportionate Cochlear Length in Genus Homo Shows a High Phylogenetic Signal during Apes’ Hearing Evolution
title Disproportionate Cochlear Length in Genus Homo Shows a High Phylogenetic Signal during Apes’ Hearing Evolution
title_full Disproportionate Cochlear Length in Genus Homo Shows a High Phylogenetic Signal during Apes’ Hearing Evolution
title_fullStr Disproportionate Cochlear Length in Genus Homo Shows a High Phylogenetic Signal during Apes’ Hearing Evolution
title_full_unstemmed Disproportionate Cochlear Length in Genus Homo Shows a High Phylogenetic Signal during Apes’ Hearing Evolution
title_short Disproportionate Cochlear Length in Genus Homo Shows a High Phylogenetic Signal during Apes’ Hearing Evolution
title_sort disproportionate cochlear length in genus homo shows a high phylogenetic signal during apes’ hearing evolution
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4471221/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26083484
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0127780
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