4.4 Article

Morphological disparity in theropod jaws: comparing discrete characters and geometric morphometrics

Journal

PALAEONTOLOGY
Volume 63, Issue 2, Pages 283-299

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pala.12455

Keywords

dinosaur; coelurosaur; maniraptoriform; disparity; morphometrics

Categories

Funding

  1. UK Natural Environment Research Council [NE/P013724/1]
  2. ERC Advanced Grant [788203 INNOVATION]

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Disparity, the diversity of form and function of organisms, can be assessed from cladistic or phenetic characters, and from discrete characters or continuous characters such as landmarks, outlines, or ratios. But do these different methods of assessing disparity provide comparable results? Here we provide evidence that all metrics correlate significantly with each other and capture similar patterns of morphological variation. We compare three methods of capturing morphological disparity (discrete characters, geometric morphometric outlines and geometric morphometric landmarks) in coelurosaurian dinosaurs. We standardize our study by focusing all our metrics on the mandible, so avoiding the risk of confounding disparity methods with anatomical coverage of the taxa. The correlation is strongest between the two geometric morphometric methods, and weaker between the morphometric methods and the discrete characters. By using phylogenetic simulations of discrete character and geometric morphometric data sets, we show that the strength of these correlations is significantly greater than expected from the evolution of random data under Brownian motion. All disparity metrics confirm that Maniraptoriformes had the highest disparity of all coelurosaurians, and omnivores and herbivores had higher disparity than carnivores.

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