INVESTIGADORES
GIANNINI Norberto Pedro
artículos
Título:
Eco-morphology of Mammalian Fossil Lineages: a Case Study in Endemic South American Ungulates
Autor/es:
GIANNINI, NP; GARCÍA-LÓPEZ DA
Revista:
JOURNAL OF MAMMALIAN EVOLUTION
Editorial:
SPRINGER
Referencias:
Lugar: Berlin; Año: 2013
ISSN:
1064-7554
Resumen:
The notoungulates are one major clade of extinct native South American ungulate mammals. Several notoungulate morphotypes have been proposed by comparison with mammals from other continents, representing instances of convergent evolution in continental isolation. As with other entirely fossil lineages, the reconstruction of their functional biology is challenging, one major obstacle being the fragmentary and distorted nature of the fossil remains for which application of conventional quantitative data analysis techniques is compromised. Here we explored the patterns in morphospace of representatives of all notoungulate families on the basis of the qualitative scoring of 31 cranial characters that provided a basic description of shape and an approximation to sensory and mechanical functions of the skull. We calculated pairwise distances between all taxa with an index that proportionally corrected overall similarity by both character number and dissimilarities. The distances were used to generate a morphospace with a multivariate technique, Principal Coordinates Analysis. We recovered a tight group of basal Paleocene-Eocene notoungulates and a scattered group of Oligocene and Neogene forms. Lines drawn in that space connecting successive sister terminals clearly showed a departure from basal genera toward four diverging morphotypes, namely rabbit-, large-rodent-, small-horse-, and rhino-like forms. An extensive character analysis recognized previously proposed morphotypes. Mapping additional information such as body size and degree of hypsodonty effectively aid in the interpretation of notoungulate morphofunctional evolution. We briefly discuss the utility of the qualitative morphospace as a tool for exploring the ecomorphology of fossil lineages and the evolutionary implications of this reconstruction.