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      Macroecological and biogeographical patterns of limb reduction in the world's skinks

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          Abstract

          Aim

          Limb reduction is a dramatic evolutionary transition, yet whether it is achieved in similar trajectories across clades, and its environmental drivers, remain unclear. We investigate the macroevolutionary and biogeographical patterns of limb reduction in skinks, where limb reduction occurred more often than in any other tetrapod clade, and test their associations with substrate categories using a global database. We test for habitat associations of body shapes in a group of Australian skinks using quantitative habitat data.

          Location

          Global (Scincidae), Australia (Sphenomorphinae).

          Taxon

          Skinks, Australian Sphenomorphinae.

          Materials and Methods

          We use morphological data to explore the patterns of limb reduction in the world's skinks, investigating how body proportions differ across skink clades and subfamilies. We examine the relationships between body shape and substrate (coarsely classified). Further, we investigate the relationships between body shape and high‐resolution soil and climate properties extracted from each species' distribution for Australian sphenomorphines.

          Results

          Relationships between limb lengths and trunk elongation show idiosyncratic patterns across skink clades. Presacral vertebrae numbers positively correlate with trunk elongation in all taxa, except Glaphyromorphus. Skinks from sandy habitats show greater disparity between forelimb and hindlimb lengths than all other substrate categories. In sphenomorphines, shorter limbs and elongated trunks correlate with colder, more humid microhabitats and richer soils; high limb disparity correlates with hot, arid microhabitats and sandy, poor substrates.

          Main Conclusions

          The evolutionary trajectories of limb reduction in skinks are clade‐specific and sometimes unique. Selection for specific limb proportions and body sizes in limb‐reduced forms changes across substrates. On poor, sandy substrates of arid environments, body shapes with longer hindlimbs may be more efficient for locomotion in a granular fluid (i.e. sand) and exploit the air–substrate interface than complete limblessness. On richer, more humid substrates, such morphology is rare, indicating that navigating cluttered substrates selects for more equal and shorter limb lengths.

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          Most cited references74

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          phytools: an R package for phylogenetic comparative biology (and other things)

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                Author and article information

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                Journal
                Journal of Biogeography
                Journal of Biogeography
                Wiley
                0305-0270
                1365-2699
                February 2023
                December 08 2022
                February 2023
                : 50
                : 2
                : 428-440
                Affiliations
                [1 ] School of Biological Sciences Monash University Clayton Victoria Australia
                [2 ] School of Biosciences University of Melbourne Parkville Victoria Australia
                [3 ] Department of Biology University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark
                [4 ] Department of Sciences Museums Victoria Carlton Victoria Australia
                [5 ] South Australian Museum Adelaide South Australia Australia
                [6 ] School of Biological Sciences University of Adelaide Adelaide South Australia Australia
                [7 ] Faculty of Science and Engineering Flinders University of South Australia Bedford Park South Australia Australia
                [8 ] School of Zoology Tel Aviv University Tel Aviv Israel
                [9 ] The Steinhardt Museum of Natural History Tel Aviv Israel
                [10 ] Fenner School of Environment and Society Australian National University Canberra Australian Capital Territory Australia
                Article
                10.1111/jbi.14547
                21754c28-e655-4b92-b535-784a4350105d
                © 2023

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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