AI Article Synopsis

  • Phenotypic convergence offers insights into how similar traits evolve independently due to natural selection, as seen in the thylacine and gray wolf, which show similar skull features despite being separated by 160 million years of evolution.
  • Researchers digitally reconstructed the cranial development of both species and found they followed similar growth patterns, even with unique lineage constraints affecting their development.
  • The study reveals that their convergent skull shapes arise from shared embryonic tissue origins and specific changes in gene regulatory networks, linking adaptive physical characteristics to underlying genetic processes.

Article Abstract

Phenotypic convergence, describing the independent evolution of similar characteristics, offers unique insights into how natural selection influences developmental and molecular processes to generate shared adaptations. The extinct marsupial thylacine and placental gray wolf represent one of the most extraordinary cases of convergent evolution in mammals, sharing striking cranial similarities despite 160 million years of independent evolution. We digitally reconstructed their cranial ontogeny from birth to adulthood to examine how and when convergence arises through patterns of allometry, mosaicism, modularity, and integration. We find the thylacine and wolf crania develop along nearly parallel growth trajectories, despite lineage-specific constraints and heterochrony in timing of ossification. These constraints were found to enforce distinct cranial modularity and integration patterns during development, which were unable to explain their adult convergence. Instead, we identify a developmental origin for their convergent cranial morphologies through patterns of mosaic evolution, occurring within bone groups sharing conserved embryonic tissue origins. Interestingly, these patterns are accompanied by homoplasy in gene regulatory networks associated with neural crest cells, critical for skull patterning. Together, our findings establish empirical links between adaptive phenotypic and genotypic convergence and provides a digital resource for further investigations into the developmental basis of mammalian evolution.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7794302PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s42003-020-01569-xDOI Listing

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