Ontogenetic allometry constrains cranial shape of the head-first burrowing worm lizard Cynisca leucura (Squamata: Amphisbaenidae)

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Standard

Ontogenetic allometry constrains cranial shape of the head-first burrowing worm lizard Cynisca leucura (Squamata: Amphisbaenidae). / Hipsley, Christy A.; Rentinck, Marc Nicolas; Rödel, Mark-Oliver; Müller, Johannes.

I: Journal of Morphology, Bind 277, Nr. 9, 2016, s. 1159-1167.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Hipsley, CA, Rentinck, MN, Rödel, M-O & Müller, J 2016, 'Ontogenetic allometry constrains cranial shape of the head-first burrowing worm lizard Cynisca leucura (Squamata: Amphisbaenidae)', Journal of Morphology, bind 277, nr. 9, s. 1159-1167. https://doi.org/10.1002/jmor.20564

APA

Hipsley, C. A., Rentinck, M. N., Rödel, M-O., & Müller, J. (2016). Ontogenetic allometry constrains cranial shape of the head-first burrowing worm lizard Cynisca leucura (Squamata: Amphisbaenidae). Journal of Morphology, 277(9), 1159-1167. https://doi.org/10.1002/jmor.20564

Vancouver

Hipsley CA, Rentinck MN, Rödel M-O, Müller J. Ontogenetic allometry constrains cranial shape of the head-first burrowing worm lizard Cynisca leucura (Squamata: Amphisbaenidae). Journal of Morphology. 2016;277(9):1159-1167. https://doi.org/10.1002/jmor.20564

Author

Hipsley, Christy A. ; Rentinck, Marc Nicolas ; Rödel, Mark-Oliver ; Müller, Johannes. / Ontogenetic allometry constrains cranial shape of the head-first burrowing worm lizard Cynisca leucura (Squamata: Amphisbaenidae). I: Journal of Morphology. 2016 ; Bind 277, Nr. 9. s. 1159-1167.

Bibtex

@article{5833269ced0a4fe799f4df3480d937ec,
title = "Ontogenetic allometry constrains cranial shape of the head-first burrowing worm lizard Cynisca leucura (Squamata: Amphisbaenidae)",
abstract = "Amphisbaenians are fossorial, predominantly limbless squamate reptiles with distinct cranial shapes corresponding to specific burrowing behaviors. Due to their cryptic lifestyles and the scarcity of museum specimens, little is known of their intraspecific variation, particularly regarding cranial osteology. This represents a critical lack of information, because the majority of morphological investigations of squamate relationships are based on cranial characters. We investigated cranial variation in the West African Coast Worm Lizard Cynisca leucura, a round-headed member of the Amphisbaenidae. Using geometric morphometric analyses of three-dimensional computed tomographic scans, we found that cranial osteology of C. leucura is highly conserved, with the majority of shape changes occurring during growth as the cranium becomes more slender and elongate, accompanied by increasing interdigitation among the dermal roofing bones. Elements of the ventral portion of the cranium remain loosely connected in adults, possibly as a protective mechanism against repeated compression and torsion during burrow excavation. Intraspecific variation was strongly correlated with size change from juveniles to adults, indicating a dominant role of ontogenetic allometry in determining cranial shape. We found no evidence of sexual dimorphism, either during growth or among adults. Given the fossorial habits of C. leucura, we hypothesize that cranial allometry is under strong stabilizing selection to maintain adequate proportions for head-first digging, thereby constraining the ability of individuals to respond to differing selection pressures, including sexual selection and variation in diet or microhabitat. For species in which digging imposes less mechanical stress (e.g., in softer sand), allometric associations during growth may be weakened, allowing changes to the ontogenetic trajectory and subsequent morphological traits. Such developmental dissociation between size and shape, known as heterochrony, may also be implicit in the evolution of the other amphisbaenian cranial shapes (shovel, spade, and keel), which may themselves be functionally adapted for their respective burrowing techniques. J. Morphol. 277:1159-1167, 2016.",
keywords = "allometry, Amphisbaenia, cranial shape, Cynisca leucura, ontogeny",
author = "Hipsley, {Christy A.} and Rentinck, {Marc Nicolas} and Mark-Oliver R{\"o}del and Johannes M{\"u}ller",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1002/jmor.20564",
language = "English",
volume = "277",
pages = "1159--1167",
journal = "Journal of Morphology",
issn = "0362-2525",
publisher = "JohnWiley & Sons, Inc.",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Ontogenetic allometry constrains cranial shape of the head-first burrowing worm lizard Cynisca leucura (Squamata: Amphisbaenidae)

AU - Hipsley, Christy A.

AU - Rentinck, Marc Nicolas

AU - Rödel, Mark-Oliver

AU - Müller, Johannes

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Amphisbaenians are fossorial, predominantly limbless squamate reptiles with distinct cranial shapes corresponding to specific burrowing behaviors. Due to their cryptic lifestyles and the scarcity of museum specimens, little is known of their intraspecific variation, particularly regarding cranial osteology. This represents a critical lack of information, because the majority of morphological investigations of squamate relationships are based on cranial characters. We investigated cranial variation in the West African Coast Worm Lizard Cynisca leucura, a round-headed member of the Amphisbaenidae. Using geometric morphometric analyses of three-dimensional computed tomographic scans, we found that cranial osteology of C. leucura is highly conserved, with the majority of shape changes occurring during growth as the cranium becomes more slender and elongate, accompanied by increasing interdigitation among the dermal roofing bones. Elements of the ventral portion of the cranium remain loosely connected in adults, possibly as a protective mechanism against repeated compression and torsion during burrow excavation. Intraspecific variation was strongly correlated with size change from juveniles to adults, indicating a dominant role of ontogenetic allometry in determining cranial shape. We found no evidence of sexual dimorphism, either during growth or among adults. Given the fossorial habits of C. leucura, we hypothesize that cranial allometry is under strong stabilizing selection to maintain adequate proportions for head-first digging, thereby constraining the ability of individuals to respond to differing selection pressures, including sexual selection and variation in diet or microhabitat. For species in which digging imposes less mechanical stress (e.g., in softer sand), allometric associations during growth may be weakened, allowing changes to the ontogenetic trajectory and subsequent morphological traits. Such developmental dissociation between size and shape, known as heterochrony, may also be implicit in the evolution of the other amphisbaenian cranial shapes (shovel, spade, and keel), which may themselves be functionally adapted for their respective burrowing techniques. J. Morphol. 277:1159-1167, 2016.

AB - Amphisbaenians are fossorial, predominantly limbless squamate reptiles with distinct cranial shapes corresponding to specific burrowing behaviors. Due to their cryptic lifestyles and the scarcity of museum specimens, little is known of their intraspecific variation, particularly regarding cranial osteology. This represents a critical lack of information, because the majority of morphological investigations of squamate relationships are based on cranial characters. We investigated cranial variation in the West African Coast Worm Lizard Cynisca leucura, a round-headed member of the Amphisbaenidae. Using geometric morphometric analyses of three-dimensional computed tomographic scans, we found that cranial osteology of C. leucura is highly conserved, with the majority of shape changes occurring during growth as the cranium becomes more slender and elongate, accompanied by increasing interdigitation among the dermal roofing bones. Elements of the ventral portion of the cranium remain loosely connected in adults, possibly as a protective mechanism against repeated compression and torsion during burrow excavation. Intraspecific variation was strongly correlated with size change from juveniles to adults, indicating a dominant role of ontogenetic allometry in determining cranial shape. We found no evidence of sexual dimorphism, either during growth or among adults. Given the fossorial habits of C. leucura, we hypothesize that cranial allometry is under strong stabilizing selection to maintain adequate proportions for head-first digging, thereby constraining the ability of individuals to respond to differing selection pressures, including sexual selection and variation in diet or microhabitat. For species in which digging imposes less mechanical stress (e.g., in softer sand), allometric associations during growth may be weakened, allowing changes to the ontogenetic trajectory and subsequent morphological traits. Such developmental dissociation between size and shape, known as heterochrony, may also be implicit in the evolution of the other amphisbaenian cranial shapes (shovel, spade, and keel), which may themselves be functionally adapted for their respective burrowing techniques. J. Morphol. 277:1159-1167, 2016.

KW - allometry

KW - Amphisbaenia

KW - cranial shape

KW - Cynisca leucura

KW - ontogeny

U2 - 10.1002/jmor.20564

DO - 10.1002/jmor.20564

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 27216290

AN - SCOPUS:85028270789

VL - 277

SP - 1159

EP - 1167

JO - Journal of Morphology

JF - Journal of Morphology

SN - 0362-2525

IS - 9

ER -

ID: 255688680