4.8 Article

Body size, shape and ecology in tetrapods

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NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
卷 13, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-32028-2

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  1. Institute of Ageing & Chronic Disease (University of Liverpool)
  2. BBSRC [BB/R016380/1]
  3. Adapting to the Challenges of a Changing Environment (ACCE1) [NE/S00713X/1]

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In this article, the authors examine the relationship between body size, shape, and segment proportions and ecology in 410 tetrapod models. They find that body proportions play a pivotal role in the ecological diversity of tetrapods, with variable allometric relationships and differential scaling in different-sized animals.
Here, the authors examine how body size, shape, and segment proportions correspond to ecology in models of 410 tetrapods. They find variable allometric relationships, differential scaling in small and large animals, and body proportions as a potential niche occupation mechanism. Body size and shape play fundamental roles in organismal function and it is expected that animals may possess body proportions that are well-suited to their ecological niche. Tetrapods exhibit a diverse array of body shapes, but to date this diversity in body proportions and its relationship to ecology have not been systematically quantified. Using whole-body skeletal models of 410 extinct and extant tetrapods, we show that allometric relationships vary across individual body segments thereby yielding changes in overall body shape as size increases. However, we also find statistical support for quadratic relationships indicative of differential scaling in small-medium versus large animals. Comparisons of locomotor and dietary groups highlight key differences in body proportions that may mechanistically underlie occupation of major ecological niches. Our results emphasise the pivotal role of body proportions in the broad-scale ecological diversity of tetrapods.

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