Ecological and life-history drivers of avian skull evolution

Author:

Hunt Eloise S E12ORCID,Felice Ryan N23,Tobias Joseph A4ORCID,Goswami Anjali25ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Life Sciences and Grantham Institute, Imperial College London , London , United Kingdom

2. Department of Life Sciences, The Natural History Museum , London , United Kingdom

3. Centre for Integrative Anatomy, Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University College London , London , United Kingdom

4. Department of Life Sciences, Imperial College London , Ascot , United Kingdom

5. Department of Genetics, Evolution, and Environment, University College London , London , United Kingdom

Abstract

AbstractOne of the most famous examples of adaptive radiation is that of the Galápagos finches, where skull morphology, particularly the beak, varies with feeding ecology. Yet increasingly studies are questioning the strength of this correlation between feeding ecology and morphology in relation to the entire neornithine radiation, suggesting that other factors also significantly affect skull evolution. Here, we broaden this debate to assess the influence of a range of ecological and life-history factors, specifically habitat density, migration, and developmental mode, in shaping avian skull evolution. Using 3D geometric morphometric data to robustly quantify skull shape for 354 extant species spanning avian diversity, we fitted flexible phylogenetic regressions and estimated evolutionary rates for each of these factors across the full data set. The results support a highly significant relationship between skull shape and both habitat density and migration, but not developmental mode. We further found heterogenous rates of evolution between different character states within habitat density, migration, and developmental mode, with rapid skull evolution in species that occupy dense habitats, are migratory, or are precocial. These patterns demonstrate that diverse factors affect the tempo and mode of avian phenotypic evolution and that skull evolution in birds is not simply a reflection of feeding ecology.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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