Abstract

Species morphological changes can be mutually influenced by environmental or biotic factors, such as competition. South American canids represent a quite recent radiation of taxa that evolved forms very disparate in phenotype, ecology and behaviour. Today, in the central part of South America there is one dominant large species (the maned wolf, Chrysocyon brachyurus) that directly influence sympatric smaller taxa via interspecific killing. Further south, three species of similar sized foxes (Lycalopex spp.) share the same habitats. Such unique combination of taxa and geographic distribution makes South American dogs an ideal group to test for the simultaneous impact of climate and competition on phenotypic variation. Using geometric morphometrics, we quantified skull size and shape of 431 specimens belonging to the eight extant South American canid species: Atelocynus microtis, Cerdocyon thous, Ch. brachyurus, Lycalopex culpaeus, L. griseus, L. gymnocercus, L. vetulus and Speothos venaticus. South American canids are significantly different in both skull size and shape. The hypercarnivorous bush dog is mostly distinct in shape from all the other taxa while a degree of overlap in shape—but not size—occurs between species of the genus Lycalopex. Both climate and competition impacts interspecific morphological variation. We identified climatic adaptations as the main driving force of diversification for the South American canids. Competition has a lower degree of impact on their skull morphology although it might have played a role in the past, when canid community was richer in morphotypes.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s11692-015-9362-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Understanding species community assembly is one of the central aims of macroecology (Rosenzweig 1995)

  • We quantified skull size and shape of 431 specimens belonging to the eight extant South American canid species: Atelocynus microtis, Cerdocyon thous, Ch. brachyurus, Lycalopex culpaeus, L. griseus, L. gymnocercus, L. vetulus and Speothos venaticus

  • Our findings show South-American canids are different in skull shape, with peculiar characters occurring especially in S. venaticus: large zygomatic arch, big upper carnassial, canine and incisors and short and thick muzzle are all wellestablished attributes related to its hypercarnivorous diet (Valkenburgh 1991; Kleiman 1972)

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding species community assembly is one of the central aims of macroecology (Rosenzweig 1995). Biotic competition might produce unexpectedly stable species assemblages. Such balancing forces are clearly not mutually exclusive and we have strong evidence that the majority of animal groups tend to be quite resilient and less sensitive to abiotic forces than expected by theory (Vrba 1993). In this regards, members of the mammalian order Carnivora received particular attention for being endothermic, ecologically diverse and secondary consumers (Goswami 2010). The red fox (Vulpes vulpes), for instance, is the commonest species to provide evidence for the impact of climate on phenotypes, in skull size, which varies with latitude

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