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Lemuriformes (Primates: Strepsirrhini) cranial morphological evolution

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Author(s):
Anna Paula Casselli Penna
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Master's Dissertation
Press: São Paulo.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Instituto de Biociências (IBIOC/SB)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Gabriel Henrique Marroig Zambonato; David Alfredo Flores
Advisor: Gabriel Henrique Marroig Zambonato
Abstract

The main goal of this study was to investigate the evolutionary processes responsible for Strepsirrhini cranial morphological evolution. Multidimensional morphological structures like the cranium can describe the amount of variance available to evolution. We used 27 landmarks and 39 euclidean distances between them to describe the variation in the cranium. We used a broad phylogenetic scaled comparison of cranial P matrices representing 40 species of Strepsirrhini primates combined to a pair of Saguinus fuscicolis G and P to investigate the stability of variance structure along this lineage. Our results show a relative stability in the patterns of variance and covariance of the clade and that P matrices can be considered as surrogates to its underling G. We also report a high association between matrix similarity and phylogenetic distance. We investigated particular contributions of each trait to matrix dissimilarity through a evolutionary perspective considering the main dietary shifts observed in the clade. Our results suggest that differences in observed patterns of variation can be attributed to characters with heterogeneity in the degree of stabilizing selection in the adult cranium and to differences in directional selection involved in chewing of specialized feeding behavior. Under the quantitative genetics theory lies an expectation for the evolution of average phenotypes that if populations have diverged by random processes, patterns of within and between-taxon morphological variation should be proportional. In chapter 2 we tested the null hypothesis that genetic drift is a sufficient explanation to observed divergence in cranial multivariate means of 70 Strepsirrhini primates. We detected deviations from neutrality along the whole clade of Strepsirrhini and specially in more inclusive nodes. We argue that this deviations reflect important historical shifts in the evolution of the clade associated with directional selection for size and in anatomical features related with diet (AU)

FAPESP's process: 13/06577-8 - Morphologic Integration in Lemuriform (Primates: Strepsirrhini) Skull.
Grantee:Anna Paula Casselli Penna
Support Opportunities: Scholarships in Brazil - Master