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Modularity and integration are key developmental properties and have remained central in evo-devo research because of how they relate to evolvability. While modularity and integration have commonly been assessed with landmark-based geometric morphometrics (GMM), other methods such as anatomical network analysis (AnNA) are increasingly being explored. Nonetheless, AnNA has seldom been used to assess variability within taxa, and there have been no attempts to verify whether its results are commensurate with GMM. We used the pectoral girdle of members of the Chrosomus eos-neogaeus hybridization complex as a case study system to assess differences between AnNA and GMM-based approaches and discuss how they should be best used. The general anatomy and composition of the pectoral girdle do not vary much within the complex; however, bones within the pectoral girdle show significant diversity in morphology and in the presence of sutures. Indeed, C. neogaeus displays characteristically enlarged coracoids and radials, and bone fusion between the cleithra, coracoids, and radials, while C. eos displays a gracile and unfused pectoral girdle. Hybrids display morphologies that are distinct from both parental species. AnNA detected multiple potential patterns of modularity, and GMM supported similar patterns of modularity across the complex but suggested different trajectories of morphological variation. Altogether, AnNA can be a valuable tool to formulate novel hypotheses in understudied taxa, which may then be tested using GMM, but careful morphological descriptions of skeletal systems are a valuable addition to the interpretation of both AnNA and GMM approaches.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ar.25666 | DOI Listing |
Integr Org Biol
July 2025
Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3EQ, UK.
Phylogenetic analyses of phenotypic characters in crown-group birds often recover results that are strongly incongruous with the findings of recent phylogenomic analyses. Furthermore, existing morphological datasets for crown birds are frequently limited by restricted taxon or character sampling, inconsistent character construction, incorrect scoring, or a combination of several of these factors. As part of an effort to address these limitations, in this study we focus on identifying phylogenetically informative characters of the avian pectoral girdle and forelimb skeleton, elements of which are commonly preserved as avian fossils.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Morphol
July 2025
Biology Department, Northland Pioneer College, Holbrook, Arizona, USA.
Therizinosaurs were a rapidly evolving lineage of maniraptoran theropods from the Upper Cretaceous of North America and Asia. Falcarius utahensis was a basal therizinosaur from the Berriasian/Valanginian Yellow Cat Member of the Cedar Mountain Formation of central Utah. Previous descriptions suggested that this therizinosaur had a plesiomorphic skeleton similar to other non-avian theropods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Fish Biol
June 2025
Department of Biology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Hudsonius hudsonius (Cypriniformes: Leuciscidae), commonly known as the spottail shiner, is a small cyprinoid fish species found across much of North America. H. hudsonius has traditionally been regarded as one of the most basal and plesiomorphic species among the notropin fishes, that is, fishes traditionally placed in or associated with the large, polyphyletic genus Notropis, including but not limited to Alburnops, Cyprinella, Ericymba, Lythrurus, Miniellus and Paranonotropis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFForensic Sci Res
June 2025
Department of Forensic Medicine, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Southbank, Australia.
As a leading cause of fatality, motor vehicle collisions comprise a significant proportion of medico-legal cases worldwide. During death investigations into such events, forensic practitioners may be asked to make inferences about the relationship between traumatic injuries and the circumstances of the collision. These interpretations require a thorough understanding of the hard and soft tissue blunt force trauma that results from vehicle collisions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
May 2025
Department of Genetics, Rutgers the State University of New Jersey, Piscataway, NJ, USA.
The mechanisms of the pectoral girdle transformation at the origin of terrestrial locomotion in vertebrates remain an outstanding problem. The loss of intramembranous bones and the enlargement of endochondral bones resulted in the disarticulation of the pectoral girdle from the skull and the formation of the neck during the fish-to-tetrapod transition. Despite the functional implications of this skeletal shift in the emergence of terrestrial vertebrates, the underlying genetic-developmental alterations have remained enigmatic.
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