4.4 Article

Miniaturization, Genome Size, and Biological Size in a Diverse Clade of Salamanders

Journal

AMERICAN NATURALIST
Volume 196, Issue 5, Pages 634-648

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/711019

Keywords

C-value; amphibians; miniaturization; Bolitoglossini

Funding

  1. Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia (CONACYT) Ciencia Basica [221614, A1-S-31613]
  2. Unidad de Genomica Avanzada
  3. Ministry of Higher Education, Science, and Technology, Republic of Slovenia [P1-184]
  4. Faculty Research Grant from Hartwick College
  5. infrastructural center Microscopy of biological samples, in the Biotechnical Faculty, University of Ljubljana

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Genome size (C-value) can affect organismal traits across levels of biological organization from tissue complexity to metabolism. Neotropical salamanders show wide variation in genome and body sizes, including several clades with miniature species. Because miniaturization imposes strong constraints on morphology and development and because genome size is strongly correlated with cell size, we hypothesize that body size has played an important role in the evolution of genome size in bolitoglossine salamanders. If this hypothesis is correct, then genome size and body size should be correlated in this group. Using Feulgen image analysis densitometry, we estimated genome sizes for 60 species of Neotropical salamanders. We also estimated the biological size of species by comparing genome size and physical body sizes in a phylogenetic context. We found a significant correlation between C-value and physical body size using optimal regression with an Ornstein-Uhlenbeck model and report the smallest salamander genome found to date. Our index of biological size showed that some salamanders with large physical body size have smaller biological body size than some miniature species and that several clades demonstrate patterns of increased or decreased biological size compared with their physical size. Our results suggest a causal relationship between physical body size and genome size and show the importance of considering the impact of both on the biological size of organisms. Indeed, biological size may be a more appropriate measure than physical size when considering phenotypic consequences of genome size evolution in many groups.

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