Published December 14, 2018 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Extreme and rapid bursts of functional adaptations shape bite force in amniotes

  • 1. University of Reading
  • 2. University of Lincoln

Description

Adaptation is the fundamental driver of functional and biomechanical evolution. Accordingly, the states of biomechanical traits (absolute or relative trait values) have long been used as proxies of adaptations in response to direct selection. However, ignoring evolutionary history, in particular ancestry, passage of time and the rate of evolution, can be misleading. Here, we apply a recently developed phylogenetic statistical approach using significant rate shifts to detect instances of exceptional rates of adaptive changes in bite force, in a large group of terrestrial vertebrates, the amniotes. Our results show that bite force in amniotes evolved through multiple bursts of exceptional rates of adaptive changes, whereby whole groups – including Darwin's finches, maniraptoran dinosaurs (group of non-avian dinosaurs including birds), anthropoids and hominins (the group of species including modern humans) – experienced significant rate increases compared to the background rate. However, in most parts of the amniote tree of life we find no exceptional rate increases, indicating that coevolution with body size was primarily responsible for the patterns observed in bite force. Our approach represents a template for future studies in functional morphology and biomechanics, where exceptional rates of adaptative changes can be quantified and potentially linked to specific ecological factors underpinning major evolutionary radiations.

Notes

Files

Data S6 - Phylogeny.txt

Files (24.9 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:3a183be30355fa0c0d842e175b9401ae
74.4 kB Download
md5:4c13b7ec41992f2dc68d5ba9b9280108
54.9 kB Download
md5:fcf42e83274595324c48907b7e004f6e
36.7 kB Download
md5:c79dd03709d8ed5a831ae3ec3dede2eb
38.4 kB Download
md5:388174df41f9afb9cf85e31e1d38862d
38.4 kB Download
md5:29d7c5cb1472cc3f2444bf188394d8ed
30.4 kB Preview Download
md5:cf7dfa99f474dda2a729ebb8021ef253
11.4 MB Preview Download
md5:5d79685ed31fab3a8071267c076f13dc
13.3 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1098/rspb.2018.1932 (DOI)