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Evolution of novel jaw joints promote trophic diversity in coral reef fishes

TLDR
It is demonstrated that the widespread IMJ occurrence among extant biters to result from a complex convergent evolutionary history, indicating that the IMJ is a major functional innovation that enhances biting strategies in several prominent reef fish groups.
Abstract
3 We investigated the functional morphology and ecology of biting among the squamipinnes, an assemblage of nine successful and distinctive reef fish families. We demonstrate that an intramandibular joint (IMJ) may have evolved at least three and possibly five times in this assemblage and discuss the impact of this recurring innovation in facilitating prey-capture by biting. Using character mapping on a supertree for the squamipinnes, we reveal up to seven gains or losses of intramandibular flexion, all associated with trophic transitions between free-living and attached prey utilization. IMJs are basal in six of the studied families whereas the origin of intramandibular flexion in the Chaetodontidae (butterflyfishes) coincides with a transition from ram-suction feeding to benthic coral feeding, with flexion magnitude reaching its peak (49 ± 2.7°) in the coral scraping subgenus Citharoedus. Although IMJs generally function to augment vertical gape expansion during biting behaviours to remove small inverte- brates, algae or coral from the reef, the functional ecology of IMJs in the Pomacanthidae (angelfishes) stands in contrast. Pomacanthid IMJs exhibit over 35° of flexion, permitting gape closure when the jaws are fully protruded. We demonstrate the widespread IMJ occurrence among extant biters to result from a complex convergent evolutionary history, indicating that the IMJ is a major functional innovation that enhances biting strategies in several prominent reef fish groups. © 2008 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2008, 93, 545-555.

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Nutritional ecology of marine herbivorous fishes: ten years on

TL;DR: An overview of recent progress in the nutritional ecology of marine herbivorous fishes is given, and two recent paradigms are examined that are considered important in the development of the field: (i) the role of temperature in latitudinal gradients of diversity and abundance, and (ii) the impact of these fishes on coral reefs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Local variation and parallel evolution: morphological and genetic diversity across a species complex of neotropical crater lake cichlid fishes.

TL;DR: It is suggested that crater lake Midas cichlids follow the predicted pattern of an adaptive radiation, with early divergence of each crater lake colonization, followed by intralacustrine diversification and speciation by ecological adaptation and sexual selection.
Journal ArticleDOI

Speciation in Freshwater Fishes

TL;DR: Major research directions in the years to come include understanding the transition from extrinsic environment-dependent to intrinsic reproductive isolation and its influences on species persistence and understanding the extrinsics and intrinsic constraints to speciation and how these relate to broad-scale diversification patterns through time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Form and function of damselfish skulls: rapid and repeated evolution into a limited number of trophic niches.

TL;DR: The data support a tight and biomechanically defined link between structure and the functional ecology of fish skulls, and indicate that certain mechanisms for transmitting motion through their jaw linkages may require particular anatomical configurations, a conclusion that contravenes the concept of "many-to-one mapping" for fish jaw mechanics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evolutionary history of the butterflyfishes (f: Chaetodontidae) and the rise of coral feeding fishes

TL;DR: It is revealed that a move onto coral reefs in the Miocene foreshadowed rapid cladogenesis within Chaetodon and the origins of corallivory, coinciding with a global reorganization of coral reefs and the expansion of fast‐growing corals.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Phylogenetic Regression

TL;DR: One conclusion is that the dates of splits between taxa, even supplemented by rates of neutral gene evolution, do not provide the ‘ true ’ covariance structure, and a pragmatic approach is adopted.
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