Abstract

BackgroundLemurs once rivalled the diversity of rest of the primate order despite thier confinement to the island of Madagascar. We test the adaptive radiation model of Malagasy lemur diversity using a novel combination of phylogenetic comparative methods and geometric methods for quantifying tooth shape.ResultsWe apply macroevolutionary model fitting approaches and disparity through time analysis to dental topography metrics associated with dietary adaptation, an aspect of mammalian ecology which appears to be closely related to diversification in many clades. Metrics were also reconstructed at internal nodes of the lemur tree and these reconstructions were combined to generate dietary classification probabilities at internal nodes using discriminant function analysis. We used these reconstructions to calculate rates of transition toward folivory per million-year intervals. Finally, lower second molar shape was reconstructed at internal nodes by modelling the change in shape of 3D meshes using squared change parsimony along the branches of the lemur tree. Our analyses of dental topography metrics do not recover an early burst in rates of change or a pattern of early partitioning of subclade disparity. However, rates of change in adaptations for folivory were highest during the Oligocene, an interval of possible forest expansion on the island.ConclusionsThere was no clear phylogenetic signal of bursts of morphological evolution early in lemur history. Reconstruction of the molar morphologies corresponding to the ancestral nodes of the lemur tree suggest that this may have been driven by a shift toward defended plant resources, however. This suggests a response to the ecological opportunity offered by expanding forests, but not necessarily a classic adaptive radiation initiated by dispersal to Madagascar.

Highlights

  • Lemurs once rivalled the diversity of rest of the primate order despite thier confinement to the island of Madagascar

  • Brownian motion (BM) was still the best model when considering only groups branching after the beginning of the Oligocene (DNE: 49% of model weight; relief index (RFI): 62% of model weight)

  • No fits preferred an early burst (EB) process predicted by an adaptive radiation (Additional file 1: Table S3)

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Summary

Introduction

Fulwood et al BMC Ecol Evo (2021) 21:60 of the relatively narrowly adapted Lorisiformes, which evolved in the presence of anthropoid primates on continental Africa and Asia [4] This diversity has prompted researchers to hypothesize that lemurs evolved on Madagascar through a process of adaptive radiation [5,6,7,8,9,10]. Simpson [12, 13] reconceptualized adaptive radiation as a process of zonal differentiation within an evolving clade as it explores a landscape of adaptive peaks previously unoccupied, or occupied by competitively inferior groups He predicted that high rates of ecomorphological evolution will occur within groups as newly formed subclades traverse the ecological distances separating adaptive peaks. This is likely to involve the spread of tropical or paratropical forests, to which primate diversity is strongly linked [19]

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