From dogs to seals to cats, members of the mammalian order Carnivora can vary greatly from one species to another. But for the most part, their skulls all tend to take on some variant of just a few shapes-a pattern scientists have long attributed to shared diets. New research led by the American Museum of Natural History and the University at Buffalo reveals that the evolution of skull shape in this group is actually much more complex and is influenced by nondietary factors. The study is published in the journal Science Advances.
Different feeding adaptations in living carnivoran species [Credit: © Bailee Desrocher] |
With data from more than 50 living species, Tseng and coauthor John Flynn, the Frick Curator of Fossil Mammals in the Museum's Division of Paleontology, created sophisticated shape and biomechanical models of skulls of carnivorans with different diets, ranging broadly from strict meat-eaters (carnivores such as lions) to plant-eaters (herbivores such as the giant panda) and less-picky eaters (omnivores such as raccoons). The models enabled them to test how shape and size correlate to such factors as the species' habitat, what time of day it is active, what it eats, where it sits in the food chain, its life expectancy, and how it moves, among others.
Stress levels shown on a theoretical skull model representing the typical skull shape of carnivoran species living in low-precipitation areas. Hotter means more stress [Credit: © Z.J. Tseng et. al.] |
Stress levels shown on a theoretical skull model representing the typical skull shape of carnivoran species living in high-precipitation areas. Hotter means more stress [Credit: © Z.J. Tseng et. al.] |
The authors expect this new analytical approach to be used for studying similarly complex form-function relationships in other animal groups.
"This could have extremely broad and important implications for how we interpret feeding adaptations in extinct species in general," Tseng said.
Source: American Museum of Natural History [February 08, 2018]