Ecologically‐related variation of digit morphology in Cyrtodactylus (Gekkota, Squamata) reveals repeated origins of incipient adhesive toepads

Author:

Riedel Jendrian12ORCID,Eisele Katrin1,Gabelaia Mariam1,Higham Timothy E.3ORCID,Wu Joseph3,Do Quyen Hanh4ORCID,Nguyen Truong Quang45ORCID,Meneses Camila G.6ORCID,Brown Rafe M.6ORCID,Ziegler Thomas78ORCID,Grismer L. Lee91011ORCID,Russell Anthony P.12ORCID,Rödder Dennis1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Section of Herpetology Leibniz Institute for the Analysis of Biodiversity Change–Museum Koenig Bonn Bonn Germany

2. Department of Evolutionary Biology Bielefeld University Bielefeld Germany

3. Department of Evolution, Ecology and Organismal Biology University of California Riverside California USA

4. Institute of Ecology and Biological Resources Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology Hanoi Vietnam

5. Graduate University of Science and Technology Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology Hanoi Vietnam

6. Biodiversity Institute and Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Kansas Lawrence Kansas USA

7. Cologne Zoo Cologne Germany

8. Institute of Zoology University of Cologne Cologne Germany

9. Department of Biology La Sierra University Riverside California USA

10. Department of Herpetology San Diego Natural History Museum San Diego California USA

11. Institute for Tropical Biology and Conservation Universiti Malaysia Sabah Kota Kinabalu Malaysia

12. Department of Biological Sciences University of Calgary Calgary Alberta Canada

Abstract

Abstract Exploitation of different locomotor substrates in different ecological niches has driven the evolution of specialized morphological structures, and similar ecological demands, such as the structure of the microhabitat, often lead to convergent or parallel evolution. The evolution of adhesive toepads in geckos remains understudied because of the paucity of phylogenetically‐informed investigations of candidate clades exhibiting purported incipient expression of these (i.e. species having evolved some, but not all, parts of the complex adhesive system of pad‐bearing geckos). Using Cyrtodactylus, a speciose genus with well‐established ecotypes, we tested the hypothesis that microhabitats that require more climbing will lead to the acquisition of incipient adhesive morphology. We measured subdigital scale area, a proxy for adhesive toepad evolution, and quantified subdigital scale shape for 77 of the 354 described species, including at least one representative of each ecotype. Subdigital scale area increased from terrestrial through generalist and saxicoline (rock‐dwelling) to arboreal ecotypes, with subdigital scale shape evolving from ancestral conditions for padless lizards to lateromedially expanded lamella‐like scales only in the arboreal ecotypes. This significant link between phenotype and environment supports the contention that scansorial, and particularly arboreal, Cyrtodactylus ecotypes have evolved incipiently expressed adhesive toepads. This highlights the suitability of this genus as a model system for studying the ecology and evolution of adhesive toepads as well as being a promising candidate for research on adaptive radiations. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

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