4.7 Article

Functional constraints during development limit jaw shape evolution in marsupials

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2021.0319

Keywords

mammals; mandible; developmental constraint; ecomorphology; convergence

Funding

  1. European Research Council [STG-2014-637171]
  2. NSF [EF-0334952, IIS-9874781, IIS-0208675, DEB-1257572, DBI-1701714, BCS 1317525, 1552848, DBI-1701769]
  3. European Research Council (ERC) starting grant TEMPO [ERC-2015-STG-677774]
  4. NSF GRFP, DDIG
  5. Duke University Trinity College of Arts and Sciences
  6. [NSF-1701420]

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Marsupials exhibit differences in jaw shape influenced by reproductive mode and diet, showing convergence with placentals but lower evolution rate and disparity in mandible shape. Their specialized reproductive biology appears to strongly constrain the evolution of their jaws despite ecological and morphological diversity.
Differences in jaw function experienced through ontogeny can have striking consequences for evolutionary outcomes, as has been suggested for the major clades of mammals. By contrast to placentals, marsupial newborns have an accelerated development of the head and forelimbs, allowing them to crawl to the mother's teats to suckle within just a few weeks of conception. The different functional requirements that marsupial newborns experience in early postnatal development have been hypothesized to have constrained their morphological diversification relative to placentals. Here, we test whether marsupials have a lower ecomorphological diversity and rate of evolution in comparison with placentals, focusing specifically on their jaws. To do so, a geometric morphometric approach was used to characterize jaw shape for 151 living and extinct species of mammals spanning a wide phylogenetic, developmental and functional diversity. Our results demonstrate that jaw shape is significantly influenced by both reproductive mode and diet, with substantial ecomorphological convergence between metatherians and eutherians. However, metatherians have markedly lower disparity and rate of mandible shape evolution than observed for eutherians. Thus, despite their ecomorphological diversity and numerous convergences with eutherians, the evolution of the jaw in metatherians appears to be strongly constrained by their specialized reproductive biology.

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