Data from: Craniodental functional evolution in sauropodomorph dinosaurs
收藏DataONE2017-02-06 更新2024-06-26 收录
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Sauropodomorpha included the largest known terrestrial vertebrates and was the first dinosaur clade to achieve a global distribution. This success is associated with their early adoption of herbivory, and sauropod gigantism has been hypothesized to be a specialization for bulk-feeding and obligate high-fiber herbivory. Here, we apply a combination of biomechanical character analysis and comparative phylogenetic methods with the aim of quantifying the evolutionary mechanics of the sauropodomorph feeding apparatus. We test for the role of convergence to common feeding function and divergence towards functional optima across sauropodomorph evolution, quantify the rate of evolution for functional characters and test for coincident evolutionary rate shifts in craniodental functional characters and body mass. Results identify a functional shift towards increased cranial robustness, increased bite force, and the onset of static occlusion at the base of the Sauropoda, consistent with a shift towards bulk-feeding. Trends towards similarity in functional characters are observed in Diplodocoidea and Titanosauriformes. However, these two clades retain significant craniodental functional differences and evidence for convergent adoption of a common ‘adaptive zone’ between them is weak. Modelling of craniodental character and body mass evolution demonstrates that these functional shifts were not correlated with evolutionary rate shifts. Instead, a significant correlation between body mass and characters related to bite force and cranial robustness suggest a correlated-progression evolutionary mode, with positive-feedback loops between body mass and dietary specializations fueling sauropod gigantism.
创建时间:
2017-02-06



