THE EVOLUTION OF CHEMORECEPTION IN SQUAMATE REPTILES - A PHYLOGENETIC APPROACH

被引:127
|
作者
SCHWENK, K
机构
[1] Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT
关键词
CHEMORECEPTION; EVOLUTION; REPTILIA; SQUAMATA; PHYLOGENY; CLADISTICS; VOMERONASAL ORGAN; TONGUE; OLFACTION; GUSTATION;
D O I
10.1159/000113830
中图分类号
B84 [心理学]; C [社会科学总论]; Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 030303 ; 04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Recent advances in the field of squamate reptile chemoreception have been paralleled by the growth and preeminence of cladistics in the field of systematics, but for the most part, workers in the former have failed to incorporate the conceptual and informational advances of the latter. In this paper, I attempt a preliminary rapprochement by combining the methods of phylogenetic systematics and current hypotheses of squamate relationships with an overview of squamate chemosensory biology. This purely phylogenetic approach leads to a number of falsifiable generalizations about the evolution of chemoreception in squamates: 1) Evolution of this system is conservative rather than plastic, reflecting to a large extent suprafamilial attributes rather than adaptation to local conditions; 2) Anguimorphs are highly chemosensory and teiids show convergence with this group; 3) Tongue-flicking, a bifurcated tongue tip, a vomeronasal (VNO) mushroom body, and a complete circular muscle system in the tongue are a correlated character complex associated with the attainment, in squamates, of a direct VNO-oral connection and the loss of a VNO-nasal connection; 4) There is little support for a visual-chemosensory dichotomy within Squamata; 5) Gekkotans are allied with Autarchoglossa, both phylogenetically and in terms of chemosensory biology; 6) Iguania are highly variable in chemosensory development; iguanids represent the primitive iguanian condition, while agamids and chamaeleonids have secondarily reduced or lost their chemosensory abilities; 7) Apparent contradictions in chemosensory behavior among iguanids probably represent intrafamilial divergence; 8) Ecological correlates within Iguanidae and other taxa might be spurious, resulting from historical factors unrelated to the adaptations in question; 9) The mechanical demands of lingual food prehension have constrained chemosensory evolution in Iguania; chemosensory evolution within Scleroglossa was permitted by the liberation of the tongue from this ancestral role.
引用
收藏
页码:124 / 137
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] A phylogenetic approach to the evolution of functional integration: Feeding and sensory systems in squamate reptiles.
    Schwenk, K
    AMERICAN ZOOLOGIST, 1999, 39 (05): : 47A - 48A
  • [2] EVOLUTION AND PHYLOGENETIC SIGNIFICANCE OF RIBOSOMAL GENE LOCATION IN CHROMOSOMES OF SQUAMATE REPTILES
    PORTER, CA
    HAIDUK, MW
    DEQUEIROZ, K
    COPEIA, 1994, (02) : 302 - 313
  • [3] Egg teeth of squamate reptiles and their phylogenetic significance
    Anan'eva, N. B.
    Orlov, N. L.
    BIOLOGY BULLETIN, 2013, 40 (07) : 600 - 605
  • [4] Egg teeth of squamate reptiles and their phylogenetic significance
    N. B. Anan’eva
    N. L. Orlov
    Biology Bulletin, 2013, 40 : 600 - 605
  • [5] The evolution of climatic niches in squamate reptiles
    Pie, Marcio R.
    Campos, Leonardo L. F.
    Meyer, Andreas L. S.
    Duran, Andressa
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2017, 284 (1858)
  • [6] VERTEBRAL EVOLUTION AND THE DIVERSIFICATION OF SQUAMATE REPTILES
    Bergmann, Philip J.
    Irschick, Duncan J.
    EVOLUTION, 2012, 66 (04) : 1044 - 1058
  • [7] Squamate reptiles as model organisms for the evolution of viviparity
    Blackburn, Daniel G.
    HERPETOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS, 2006, 20 : 131 - 146
  • [8] Dynamic evolution of venom proteins in squamate reptiles
    Nicholas R. Casewell
    Gavin A. Huttley
    Wolfgang Wüster
    Nature Communications, 3
  • [9] Dynamic evolution of venom proteins in squamate reptiles
    Casewell, Nicholas R.
    Huttley, Gavin A.
    Wuester, Wolfgang
    NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2012, 3
  • [10] The evolution of oviparity in squamate reptiles: An adaptationist perspective
    Shine, Richard
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL ZOOLOGY PART B-MOLECULAR AND DEVELOPMENTAL EVOLUTION, 2015, 324 (06) : 487 - 492