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  3. Linking morphology, performance, and habitat utilization: adaptation across biologically relevant 'levels' in tamarins.
 

Linking morphology, performance, and habitat utilization: adaptation across biologically relevant 'levels' in tamarins.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/192926
Date of Publication
February 14, 2024
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institut für Ökologie...

Contributor
Berles, Patricia
Wölfer, Jan
Alfieri, Fabio
Institut für Ökologie und Evolution (IEE)
Botton-Divet, Léo
Guéry, Jean-Pascal
Nyakatura, John A
Subject(s)

500 - Science::570 - ...

Series
BMC ecology and evolution
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2730-7182
Publisher
BioMed Central
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1186/s12862-023-02193-z
PubMed ID
38355429
Uncontrolled Keywords

Biomechanics Field st...

Description
BACKGROUND

Biological adaptation manifests itself at the interface of different biologically relevant 'levels', such as ecology, performance, and morphology. Integrated studies at this interface are scarce due to practical difficulties in study design. We present a multilevel analysis, in which we combine evidence from habitat utilization, leaping performance and limb bone morphology of four species of tamarins to elucidate correlations between these 'levels'.

RESULTS

We conducted studies of leaping behavior in the field and in a naturalistic park and found significant differences in support use and leaping performance. Leontocebus nigrifrons leaps primarily on vertical, inflexible supports, with vertical body postures, and covers greater leaping distances on average. In contrast, Saguinus midas and S. imperator use vertical and horizontal supports for leaping with a relatively similar frequency. S. mystax is similar to S. midas and S. imperator in the use of supports, but covers greater leaping distances on average, which are nevertheless shorter than those of L. nigrifrons. We assumed these differences to be reflected in the locomotor morphology, too, and compared various morphological features of the long bones of the limbs. According to our performance and habitat utilization data, we expected the long bone morphology of L. nigrifrons to reflect the largest potential for joint torque generation and stress resistance, because we assume longer leaps on vertical supports to exert larger forces on the bones. For S. mystax, based on our performance data, we expected the potential for torque generation to be intermediate between L. nigrifrons and the other two Saguinus species. Surprisingly, we found S. midas and S. imperator having relatively more robust morphological structures as well as relatively larger muscle in-levers, and thus appearing better adapted to the stresses involved in leaping than the other two.

CONCLUSION

This study demonstrates the complex ways in which behavioral and morphological 'levels' map onto each other, cautioning against oversimplification of ecological profiles when using large interspecific eco-morphological studies to make adaptive evolutionary inferences.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/174445
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