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The shape of contention: adaptation, history, and contingency in ungulate mandibles.

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TLDR
A strong phylogenetic effect was obtained in perissodactyls, suggesting that their mandible shape should be strongly inherited, and Digestive strategy is deemed to interplay with hypsodonty to produce different paths of adaptation to particular diets in ungulates.
Abstract
Mandibles and teeth of ungulates have been extensively studied to discern the functional significance of their design. Grazing ungulates have deeper mandibles, longer coronoid processes, flatter incisor arcades, and more hypsodont molars in comparison to browsers. If the functional significance of both mandible and teeth shapes is well-established, it remains uncertain to what extent mandible shapes are really adapted to grazing, meaning that they evolved either to serve their current biological function or just as a structural requirement to accommodate higher crowned molars. Here, we address this question by studying the contribution of phylogeny, hypsodonty, and body size to mandibular shape variation. The mandible shape appeared to be significantly influenced by hypsodonty but not by body size. Interestingly, hypsodonty-related changes influenced the tooth row in artiodactyls and perissodactyls significantly but in the opposite directions, which is ultimately related to their different digestive strategies. Yet, we obtained a strong phylogenetic effect in perissodactyls, suggesting that their mandible shape should be strongly inherited. The strength of this effect was not significant within artiodactyls (where hypsodonty explained much more variance in mandible shape). Digestive strategy is deemed to interplay with hypsodonty to produce different paths of adaptation to particular diets in ungulates.

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Australopithecus afarensis scapular ontogeny, function, and the role of climbing in human evolution.

TL;DR: The similarity of juvenile and adult fossil morphologies implies that A. afarensis development was apelike, and their presence in australopith fossils supports the hypothesis that their locomotor repertoire included a substantial amount of climbing.
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Shape at the cross-roads: homoplasy and history in the evolution of the carnivoran skull towards herbivory

TL;DR: The results indicate that both historical constraints and adaptation have interplayed in the evolution towards herbivory of the carnivoran skull, which has resulted in repeated patterns of biomechanical homoplasy.
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Evolution of Neogene Mammals in Eurasia: Environmental Forcing and Biotic Interactions

TL;DR: It is suggested that species with evolutionary novelties arise predominantly in “species factories” that develop under harsh environmental conditions, under dominant physical forcing, whereas exceptionally mild environments give rise to “oases in the desert,” characterized by strong competition and survival of relics.
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How many specimens do I need? Sampling error in geometric morphometrics: testing the sensitivity of means and variances in simple randomized selection experiments

TL;DR: Using resampling methods and sensitivity analyses based on randomized subsamples, sampling error in horse teeth from several modern and fossil populations is assessed and indicates that mean centroid size is highly accurate; even when sample size is small, errors are generally considerably smaller than differences among populations.
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Ecological Specialization in Fossil Mammals Explains Cope’s Rule

TL;DR: An explicit and phylogenetically informed analysis of body size evolution in Cenozoic mammals shows that body size increases significantly in most inclusive clades, and significant pulses in origination of large-sized species are concentrated in periods of global cooling.
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