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      The utility of cranial ontogeny for phylogenetic inference: a case study in crocodylians using geometric morphometrics.

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          Abstract

          The degree to which the ontogeny of organisms could facilitate our understanding of phylogenetic relationships has long been a subject of contention in evolutionary biology. The famed notion that 'ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny' has been largely discredited, but there remains an expectation that closely related organisms undergo similar morphological transformations throughout ontogeny. To test this assumption, we used three-dimensional geometric morphometric methods to characterize the cranial morphology of 10 extant crocodylian species and construct allometric trajectories that model the post-natal ontogenetic shape changes. Using time-calibrated molecular and morphological trees, we employed a suite of comparative phylogenetic methods to assess the extent of phylogenetic signal in these trajectories. All analyses largely demonstrated a lack of significant phylogenetic signal, indicating that ontogenetic shape changes contain little phylogenetic information. Notably, some Mantel tests yielded marginally significant results when analysed with the morphological tree, which suggest that the underlying signal in these trajectories is correlated with similarities in the adult cranial morphology. However, despite these instances, all other analyses, including more powerful tests for phylogenetic signal, recovered statistical and visual evidence against the assumption that similarities in ontogenetic shape changes are commensurate with phylogenetic relatedness and thus bring into question the efficacy of using allometric trajectories for phylogenetic inference.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J. Evol. Biol.
          Journal of evolutionary biology
          1420-9101
          1010-061X
          Jun 2014
          : 27
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Biological Science, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA.
          Article
          10.1111/jeb.12382
          24835112
          e1f55934-b0b6-4fc5-bbef-2acd64f17578
          © 2014 The Authors. Journal of Evolutionary Biology © 2014 European Society For Evolutionary Biology.
          History

          Crocodylia,allometry,geometric morphometrics,ontogeny,phylogenetic signal

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