Evolução do crânio dos macacos do Velho Mundo: uma abordagem de genética quantitativa / Cranial evolution of Old World monkeys and Apes: a quantitative genetics approach

AUTOR(ES)
DATA DE PUBLICAÇÃO

2009

RESUMO

This is a study on the cranial diversification of the Catarrhini, a large group of primates that includes all Old World monkeys and apes, bringing together two approaches to investigate the evolution of complex characters: quantitative genetics and morphological integration. It has three main goals: 1) to compare magnitudes and patterns of inter-trait relationships in the skull among catarrhines; 2) to test the null hypothesis that genetic drift is the sole agent responsible for cranial diversification; 3) to explore the evolutionary consequences of inter-trait associations. With a large and representative cranial database of Old World monkeys and apes (39 measurements of around 6,000 skulls from more than 130 species), I generated and compared correlation and variance/covariance matrices, which summarize inter-trait relationships, among several Catarrhini groups. I compared some of those matrices to expectations derived from theoretical models of evolution through genetic drift, and simulated natural selection to observe the evolutionary behavior of each matrix. From a broad perspective, the patterns of relationships are the same among all catarrhines, but the magnitudes are quite variable. This has very important evolutionary consequences, because groups with low overall magnitudes tend to respond in the same direction of selection (high evolutionary flexibility), while higher magnitudes, regardless of the direction of selection, are associated to responses along the axis of highest variation, which in this case corresponds to size variation (low evolutionary flexibility). The initial diversification of catarrhines seems to have been generated by natural selection, but drift probably played a major role at the genus and species level; the exception are the cercopithecines, for which there is evidence for selection also in those levels. Based on these results, I propose a model that links the overall magnitude of inter-trait correlations to the possible evolutionary paths of a given population. This study is empirically restricted to Old World monkeys and apes, but the model has been proved valid to a broader sample of mammals and can be tested for other groups, contributing for our understanding of how complex characters evolve.

ASSUNTO(S)

deriva genética evolução morfológica morphological integration integração morfológica morphological evolution seleção natural natural selection genetic drift.

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