Development and evolution of segmentation assessed by geometric morphometrics: The centipede Strigamia maritima as a case study |
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Affiliation: | 1. Applied Molecular Solutions Research Group, Environmental and Animal Sciences, Unitec Institute of Technology, Private Bag 92025, Victoria Street West, Auckland 1142, New Zealand;2. Bio-Protection Research Centre, PO Box 85084, Lincoln University, Lincoln 7647, New Zealand;3. Department of Entomology, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164-6382, USA;1. Early Life Institute, The Key Laboratory of Continental Dynamics, Department of Geology, Northwest University, Xi''an 710069, China;2. Museum für Naturkunde, Leibniz Institute for Research on Evolution and Biodiversity at the Humboldt University Berlin, D-10115 Berlin, Germany |
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Abstract: | Using the centipede model species Strigamia maritima as a subject of study, we illustrate the potential of geometric morphometrics for investigating the development and evolution of segmentation, with a specific focus on post-embryonic segmental patterning. We show how these techniques can contribute detailed descriptive data for comparative purposes, but also precious information on some features of the developmental system that are considered relevant for the evolvability of a segmented body architecture, such as developmental stability and canalization. Morphometric analyses allow to separately investigate several sources of phenotypic variation along a segmented body axis, like constitutive and random segment heteronomy, both within and among individuals. Specifically, in S. maritima, the segmental pattern of ventral sclerite shapes mirrors that of their bilateral fluctuating asymmetry and among-individual variation in associating the most anterior and most posterior segments in diverging from the central ones. Also, among segments, there seems to be a correlation between fluctuating asymmetry and shape variation among individuals, suggesting that canalization and developmental stability are somehow associated. Overall, these associations might stem from a joint influence of the segmental position on the two processes of developmental buffering. |
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Keywords: | Arthropods Canalization Developmental stability Evolvability Fluctuating asymmetry Segmental patterning |
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