Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://biore.bio.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1994
Title: Evolution of skull shape in the family Salamandridae (Amphibia: Caudata)
Authors: Ivanović, Ana 
Arntzen, Jan
Keywords: cranial skeleton;frontosquamosal arch;geometric morphometrics;morphospace;newts;phylomorphospace;salamanders
Issue Date: 1-Mar-2018
Rank: M21
Project: Diversity of the amphibians and reptiles on the Balkan Peninsula: evolutionary and conservation aspects 
EC SyntheSys programme
Naturalis Temminck fellowship
Journal: Journal of Anatomy
Abstract: 
© 2017 Anatomical Society We carried out a comparative morphometric analysis of 56 species of salamandrid salamanders, representing 19 out of 21 extant genera, with the aim of uncovering the major patterns of skull shape diversification, and revealing possible trends and directions of evolutionary change. To do this we used micro-computed tomography scanning and three-dimensional geometric morphometrics, along with a well-resolved molecular phylogeny. We found that allometry explains a relatively small amount of shape variation across taxa. Congeneric species of salamandrid salamanders are more similar to each other and cluster together producing distinct groups in morphospace. We detected a strong phylogenetic signal and little homoplasy. The most pronounced changes in the skull shape are related to the changes of the frontosquamosal arch, a unique feature of the cranial skeleton for the family Salamandridae, which is formed by processes arising from the frontal and squamosal bones that arch over the orbits. By mapping character states over the phylogeny, we found that a reduction of the frontosquamosal arch occurs independently in three lineages of the subfamily Pleurodelinae. This reduction can probably be attributed to changes in the development and ossification rates of the frontosquamosal arch. In general, our results are similar to those obtained for caecilian amphibians, with an early expansion into the available morphospace and a complex history characterizing evolution of skull shape in both groups. To evaluate the specificity of the inferred evolutionary trajectories and Caudata-wide trends in the diversity of skull morphology, information from additional groups of tailed amphibians is needed.
URI: https://biore.bio.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1994
ISSN: 0021-8782
DOI: 10.1111/joa.12759
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