Data from: Microanatomy of the amniote femur and inference of lifestyle in limbed vertebrates
Data files
Feb 14, 2013 version files 446.51 KB
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Quémeneur et al. R1 SOM 1.xls
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Quemeneur et al. SOM 2R1.nex
129.53 KB
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Quémeneur et al. SOM 3.pdf
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Quémeneur et al. SOM 4.xls
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Abstract
The femoral microanatomy of 155 species of extant amniotes (57 species of mammals, 15 species of turtles, 56 species of lepidosaurs, and 27 species of birds) of known lifestyle is studied to demonstrate a possible link between some basic parameters of bone structure and specific lifestyles, as well as phylogenetic relationships between taxa. Squared change parsimony with random taxon reshuffling and pairwise comparisons reveal that most compactness and size parameters exhibit both phylogenetic and ecological signals. A discriminant analysis produces several inference models, including a ternary model (aquatic, amphibious, terrestrial) that yield the correct lifestyle in 88% of the cases. These models are used to infer the lifestyle of three extinct Permian temnospondyls: Eryops megacephalus, Acheloma dunni, and Trimerorhachis insignis.