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1000 Titel
  • Selective regimes and functional anatomy in the mustelid forelimb: Diversification toward specializations for climbing, digging, and swimming
1000 Autor/in
  1. Kilbourne, Branden M. |
1000 Erscheinungsjahr 2017
1000 LeibnizOpen
1000 Publikationstyp
  1. Artikel |
1000 Online veröffentlicht
  • 2017-09-20
1000 Erschienen in
1000 Quellenangabe
  • 7(21): 8852–8863
1000 FRL-Sammlung
1000 Copyrightjahr
  • 2017
1000 Lizenz
1000 Verlagsversion
  • https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.3407 |
  • https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5677490/ |
1000 Ergänzendes Material
  • http://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.87pg9 |
1000 Publikationsstatus
1000 Begutachtungsstatus
1000 Sprache der Publikation
1000 Abstract/Summary
  • Anatomical traits associated with locomotion often exhibit specializations for ecological niche, suggesting that locomotor specializations may constitute selective regimes acting on limb skeletal traits. To test this, I sampled 42 species of Mustelidae, encompassing climbing, digging, and swimming specialists, and determined whether trait variation reflects locomotor specialization by performing a principal components analysis on 14 forelimb traits. In addition to Brownian motion models, three Ornstein–Uhlenbeck models of selective regimes were applied to PC scores describing trait variation among mustelids: one without a priori defined phenotypic optima, one with optima based upon locomotor habit, and one with a single phenotypic optimum. PC1, which explained 43.8% of trait variance, represented a trade-off in long bone gracility and deltoid ridge length vs. long robustness and olecranon process length and distinguished between climbing specialists and remaining mustelids. PC2, which explained 17.4% of trait variance, primarily distinguished the sea otter from other mustelids. Best fitting trait diversification models are selective regimes differentiating between scansorial and nonscansorial mustelids (PC1) and selective regimes distinguishing the sea otter and steppe polecat from remaining mustelids (PC2). Phylogenetic half-life values relative to branch lengths suggest that, in spite of a strong rate of adaptation, there is still the influence of past trait values. However, simulations of likelihood ratios suggest that the best fitting models are not fully adequate to explain morphological diversification within extant mustelids.
1000 Sacherschließung
lokal morphology
lokal mustelidae
lokal limbs
lokal selective regimes
lokal locomotion
lokal adaptive diversification
1000 Fächerklassifikation (DDC)
1000 Liste der Beteiligten
  1. https://frl.publisso.de/adhoc/creator/S2lsYm91cm5lLCBCcmFuZGVuIE0u
1000 Label
1000 Förderer
  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft |
  2. Leibniz Association |
1000 Fördernummer
  1. Ki 1843/3-1
  2. -
1000 Förderprogramm
  1. -
  2. Open Access Fund
1000 Dateien
1000 Förderung
  1. 1000 joinedFunding-child
    1000 Förderer Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft |
    1000 Förderprogramm -
    1000 Fördernummer Ki 1843/3-1
  2. 1000 joinedFunding-child
    1000 Förderer Leibniz Association |
    1000 Förderprogramm Open Access Fund
    1000 Fördernummer -
1000 Objektart article
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1000 Erstellt am 2017-12-04T12:29:00.843+0100
1000 Erstellt von 122
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1000 Bearbeitet von 218
1000 Zuletzt bearbeitet 2021-08-05T14:17:08.741+0200
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1000 Vgl. frl:6405674
1000 Oai Id
  1. oai:frl.publisso.de:frl:6405674 |
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