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| DOI | 10.1016/J.JHEVOL.2017.07.015 | ||||
| Año | 2017 | ||||
| Tipo | artículo de investigación |
Citas Totales
Autores Afiliación Chile
Instituciones Chile
% Participación
Internacional
Autores
Afiliación Extranjera
Instituciones
Extranjeras
Platyrrhines are a diverse group of primates that presently occupy a broad range of tropical-equatorial environments in the Americas. However, most of the fossil platyrrhine species of the early Miocene have been found at middle and high latitudes. Although the fossil record of New World monkeys has improved considerably over the past several years, it is still difficult to trace the origin of major modern clades. One of the most commonly preserved anatomical structures of early platyrrhines is the talus. This work provides an analysis of the phenetic affinities of extant platyrrhine tali and their Miocene counterparts through geometric morphometrics and a series of phylogenetic comparative analyses. Geometric morphometrics was used to quantify talar shape affinities, while locomotor mode percentages (LMPs) were used to test if talar shape is associated with locomotion. Comparative analyses were used to test if there was convergence in talar morphology, as well as different models that could explain the evolution of talar shape and size in platyrrhines. Body mass predictions for the fossil sample were also computed using the available articular surfaces. The results showed that most analyzed fossils exhibit a generalized morphology that is similar to some 'generalist' modern species. It was found that talar shape covaries with LMPs, thus allowing the inference of locomotion from talar morphology. The results further suggest that talar shape diversification can be explained by invoking a model of shifts in adaptive peak to three optima representing a phylogenetic hypothesis in which each platyrrhine family occupied a separate adaptive peak. The analyses indicate that platyrrhine talar centroid size diversification was characterized by an early differentiation related to a multidimensional niche model. Finally, the ancestral platyrrhine condition was reconstructed as a medium-sized, generalized, arboreal, quadruped. (C) 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
| Ord. | Autor | Género | Institución - País |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Puschel, Thomas A. | Hombre |
UNIV MANCHESTER - Reino Unido
University of Manchester - Reino Unido Faculty of Science and Engineering - Reino Unido |
| 2 | Gladman, Justin T. | Hombre |
CUNY - Estados Unidos
NYCEP - Estados Unidos The Doctorate-Granting Institution of the City University of New York - Estados Unidos |
| 3 | Bobe, R. | Hombre |
Universidad de Chile - Chile
UNIV OXFORD - Reino Unido University of Oxford - Reino Unido |
| 4 | SELLERS, WILLIAM, I | Hombre |
UNIV MANCHESTER - Reino Unido
University of Manchester - Reino Unido Faculty of Science and Engineering - Reino Unido |
| Fuente |
|---|
| Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council |
| BBSRC |
| Becas Chile Scholarship |
| Agradecimiento |
|---|
| This work was supported by the BBSRC BB/K006029/1. TP was partially funded by a Becas Chile scholarship 72140028. We are grateful to the following people and institutions for the access granted to analyze some of the specimens under their care: Institut des Sciences de l'Evolution de Montpellier (ISE-M), Montpellier RIO Imaging (MRI) and the LabEx CeMEB; Micro CT scan operator Renaud Lebrun, IR CNRS; MIF MicroCT facility at the AMNH and SMIF MicroCT facility at Duke University; Laurent Marivaux (Universite de Montpellier); Rodolfo Salas-Gismondi (Museo de Historia Natural, Peru); John Fleagle (Stony Brook University); Marcelo Reguero (Museo de la Plata); Marcelo Tejedor (Universidad Nacional de la Patagonia); David Rubilar-Rogers (Museo de Historia Natural, Chile); Alfred Rosenberger (CUNY); Ross MacPhee (AMNH); Doug Boyer (Duke University) and MorphoSource. We also thank Hugo A. Benitez for his help regarding the interpretation of some of the GM analyses and Aryel Pacheco for kindly providing his portable structured-light scanner. We are also grateful to the Associate and Copy Editors, three anonymous reviewers, Daniel L. Gebo and Sarah Elton for their reviews, suggestions and comments that greatly improved this work. |
| This work was supported by the BBSRC BB/K006029/1 . TP was partially funded by a Becas Chile scholarship 72140028. We are grateful to the following people and institutions for the access granted to analyze some of the specimens under their care: Institut des Sciences de l'Evolution de Montpellier (ISE-M), Montpellier RIO Imaging (MRI) and the LabEx CeMEB; Micro CT scan operator Renaud Lebrun, IR CNRS; MIF MicroCT facility at the AMNH and SMIF MicroCT facility at Duke University; Laurent Marivaux (Université de Montpellier); Rodolfo Salas-Gismondi (Museo de Historia Natural, Peru); John Fleagle (Stony Brook University); Marcelo Reguero (Museo de la Plata); Marcelo Tejedor (Universidad Nacional de la Patagonia); David Rubilar-Rogers (Museo de Historia Natural, Chile); Alfred Rosenberger (CUNY); Ross MacPhee (AMNH); Doug Boyer (Duke University) and MorphoSource. We also thank Hugo A. Benítez for his help regarding the interpretation of some of the GM analyses and Aryel Pacheco for kindly providing his portable structured-light scanner. We are also grateful to the Associate and Copy Editors, three anonymous reviewers, Daniel L. Gebo and Sarah Elton for their reviews, suggestions and comments that greatly improved this work. |