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Repeated evolution of camouflage in speciose desert rodents
by
Campos, João C.
, Cunha, José L.
, Granjon, Laurent
, Serén, Nina
, Brito, José C.
, Rzebik-Kowalska, Barbara
, Mappes, Tapio
, Ndiaye, Arame
, Boratyński, Zbyszek
in
631/158/857
/ 631/181
/ Animal Fur - physiology
/ Animals
/ Biological Evolution
/ Biological Mimicry
/ Camouflage
/ Color
/ Crypsis
/ Ecosystem
/ Evolution
/ Evolutionary genetics
/ Genotype
/ Gerbillinae - classification
/ Gerbillinae - genetics
/ Gerbillinae - physiology
/ Gerbillus
/ Habitats
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Mammals
/ multidisciplinary
/ Phenotype
/ Phylogenetics
/ Phylogeny
/ Remote sensing
/ Reproductive fitness
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Species
/ Structure-function relationships
2017
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Repeated evolution of camouflage in speciose desert rodents
by
Campos, João C.
, Cunha, José L.
, Granjon, Laurent
, Serén, Nina
, Brito, José C.
, Rzebik-Kowalska, Barbara
, Mappes, Tapio
, Ndiaye, Arame
, Boratyński, Zbyszek
in
631/158/857
/ 631/181
/ Animal Fur - physiology
/ Animals
/ Biological Evolution
/ Biological Mimicry
/ Camouflage
/ Color
/ Crypsis
/ Ecosystem
/ Evolution
/ Evolutionary genetics
/ Genotype
/ Gerbillinae - classification
/ Gerbillinae - genetics
/ Gerbillinae - physiology
/ Gerbillus
/ Habitats
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Mammals
/ multidisciplinary
/ Phenotype
/ Phylogenetics
/ Phylogeny
/ Remote sensing
/ Reproductive fitness
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Species
/ Structure-function relationships
2017
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Repeated evolution of camouflage in speciose desert rodents
by
Campos, João C.
, Cunha, José L.
, Granjon, Laurent
, Serén, Nina
, Brito, José C.
, Rzebik-Kowalska, Barbara
, Mappes, Tapio
, Ndiaye, Arame
, Boratyński, Zbyszek
in
631/158/857
/ 631/181
/ Animal Fur - physiology
/ Animals
/ Biological Evolution
/ Biological Mimicry
/ Camouflage
/ Color
/ Crypsis
/ Ecosystem
/ Evolution
/ Evolutionary genetics
/ Genotype
/ Gerbillinae - classification
/ Gerbillinae - genetics
/ Gerbillinae - physiology
/ Gerbillus
/ Habitats
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Mammals
/ multidisciplinary
/ Phenotype
/ Phylogenetics
/ Phylogeny
/ Remote sensing
/ Reproductive fitness
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Species
/ Structure-function relationships
2017
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Repeated evolution of camouflage in speciose desert rodents
Journal Article
Repeated evolution of camouflage in speciose desert rodents
2017
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Overview
There are two main factors explaining variation among species and the evolution of characters along phylogeny: adaptive change, including phenotypic and genetic responses to selective pressures, and phylogenetic inertia, or the resemblance between species due to shared phylogenetic history. Phenotype-habitat colour match, a classic Darwinian example of the evolution of camouflage (crypsis), offers the opportunity to test the importance of historical versus ecological mechanisms in shaping phenotypes among phylogenetically closely related taxa. To assess it, we investigated fur (phenotypic data) and habitat (remote sensing data) colourations, along with phylogenetic information, in the species-rich
Gerbillus
genus. Overall, we found a strong phenotype-habitat match, once the phylogenetic signal is taken into account. We found that camouflage has been acquired and lost repeatedly in the course of the evolutionary history of
Gerbillus
. Our results suggest that fur colouration and its covariation with habitat is a relatively labile character in mammals, potentially responding quickly to selection. Relatively unconstrained and substantial genetic basis, as well as structural and functional independence from other fitness traits of mammalian colouration might be responsible for that observation.
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