Authors
Daniel J Paluh, Edward L Stanley, David C Blackburn
Publication date
2020/4/14
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
117
Issue
15
Pages
8554-8562
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Frogs (Anura) are one of the most diverse vertebrate orders, comprising more than 7,000 species with a worldwide distribution and extensive ecological diversity. In contrast to other tetrapods, frogs have a highly derived body plan and simplified skull. In many lineages of anurans, increased mineralization has led to hyperossified skulls, but the function of this trait and its relationship with other aspects of head morphology are largely unexplored. Using three-dimensional morphological data from 158 species representing all frog families, we assessed wide-scale patterns of shape variation across all major lineages, reconstructed the evolutionary history of cranial hyperossification across the anuran phylogeny, and tested for relationships between ecology, skull shape, and hyperossification. Although many frogs share a conserved skull shape, several extreme forms have repeatedly evolved that commonly are …
Total citations
2020202120222023202442714204
Scholar articles
DJ Paluh, EL Stanley, DC Blackburn - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2020