Higham Lab

University of California, Riverside

Ecomorphology of the Locomotor Apparatus in the Genus Cyrtodactylus (Gekkota, Squamata)


Journal article


Jendrian Riedel, L. L. Grismer, Timothy E. Higham, Joseph Wu, Q. Do, T. Nguyen, Camila G. Meneses, Rafe M. Brown, Patrick D. Campbell, Thomas Ziegler, Anthony P. Russell, Dennis Rödder
Evolutionary biology, 2024

Semantic Scholar DOI
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APA   Click to copy
Riedel, J., Grismer, L. L., Higham, T. E., Wu, J., Do, Q., Nguyen, T., … Rödder, D. (2024). Ecomorphology of the Locomotor Apparatus in the Genus Cyrtodactylus (Gekkota, Squamata). Evolutionary Biology.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Riedel, Jendrian, L. L. Grismer, Timothy E. Higham, Joseph Wu, Q. Do, T. Nguyen, Camila G. Meneses, et al. “Ecomorphology of the Locomotor Apparatus in the Genus Cyrtodactylus (Gekkota, Squamata).” Evolutionary biology (2024).


MLA   Click to copy
Riedel, Jendrian, et al. “Ecomorphology of the Locomotor Apparatus in the Genus Cyrtodactylus (Gekkota, Squamata).” Evolutionary Biology, 2024.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{jendrian2024a,
  title = {Ecomorphology of the Locomotor Apparatus in the Genus Cyrtodactylus (Gekkota, Squamata)},
  year = {2024},
  journal = {Evolutionary biology},
  author = {Riedel, Jendrian and Grismer, L. L. and Higham, Timothy E. and Wu, Joseph and Do, Q. and Nguyen, T. and Meneses, Camila G. and Brown, Rafe M. and Campbell, Patrick D. and Ziegler, Thomas and Russell, Anthony P. and Rödder, Dennis}
}

Abstract

Adaptive radiations garner considerable interest from evolutionary biologists. Lizard radiations diversifying along structural niche space often exhibit distinct changes in body and limb proportions. One prediction is that terrestrial species inhabiting open habitats will have relatively longer hindlimbs, associated with faster running speeds, while scansorial species will have relatively shorter limbs to keep the centre of mass closer to the substratum. Alternatively, terrestrial species in densely vegetated habitats could benefit from relatively shorter limbs to prevent entanglement with more frequently encountered obstacles, whereas scansorial species could benefit from longer limbs promoting greater limb spans and static stability. Cyrtodactylus, an ecologically diverse gekkonid genus, includes numerous specialists with narrow structural niches, but the degree of morphological diversification exhibited by these specialists is largely unknown. We investigated associations between locomotor morphology and structural microhabitat use in Cyrtodactylus to test if either of the opposing predictions can be corroborated for this radiation. We measured body length and relative limb dimensions of 87 species, covering multiple independent transitions among structural microhabitat preferences. Using these data, we reconstructed the phylomorphospace and tested for associations between structural microhabitat niche and limb morphology. We found strong separation between structural niche groups in accordance with the second hypothesis, although overlap is evident among functionally related niches such as those of granite and karst specialists.