Evidence of morphological homoplasy among large, semi-aquatic species of Desmognathus

Author:

Camp Carlos D.1,Felix Zachary I.2ORCID,Wooten Jessica A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Piedmont University, 1021 Central Avenue, Demorest, GA 30535, USA

2. Biology Program, Reinhardt University, 7300 Reinhardt Circle, Waleska, GA 30182, USA

Abstract

Abstract The salamander family Plethodontidae is replete with instances of repeated homoplasy. We tested for morphological homoplasy in distantly related species of the plethodontid genus Desmognathus that share similar ecologies. Specifically, we compared species that are large and nearly aquatic. Using morphometric analyses, we compared the respective morphologies of four large, nearly aquatic forms, specifically the Black Mountain Salamander (Desmognathus welteri), the Dwarf Black-bellied Salamander (D. folkertsi), and two phylogenetically divergent lineages of the Black-bellied Salamander (D. quadramaculatus). Morphometric analysis uncovered distinct differences among them. However, all of the large-bodied lineages exhibited the same extent of tail-fin development in spite of D. welteri’s closer phylogenetic relationship to smaller, more-terrestrial species than to the other large, nearly aquatic forms we tested. We hypothesize that large body size is also a consequence of aquatic adaptation. These morphological consequences of a nearly aquatic ecology represent another case of homoplasy within this salamander family.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference49 articles.

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2. Life history of a small form of the plethodontid salamander Desmognathus quadramaculatus;Beachy, C.

3. Bond, T. (2007): A study of the genus Desmognathus in West Virginia, with emphasis on Desmognathus welteri, the Black Mountain Salamander. M.Sc. Thesis, Marshall University, Huntington, West Virginia, USA.

4. Speciation, phylogeography and evolution of life history and morphology in plethodontid salamanders of the Eurycea multiplicata complex;Bonett, R.M.

5. Sexual size dimorphism in Desmognathine salamanders;Bruce, R.C.

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