So it’s been a while since my last post, but this one comes
as an exciting advancement in my scientific career (and a day late for my birthday). My first postdoc paper was accepted and has now been published:
Cuff et al., 2015.Big cat, small cat: Reconstructing body size evolution in living and extinct Felidae. Journal of Evolutionary Biology. doi: 10.1111/jeb.12671.
This post isn’t to say how amazing the work is, more a way of me distilling and simplifying the information so that my family, non-scientific (or at least phylogenetics based) friends and interested others may be able to understand what I have published on (see last post). If you are interested in a copy and do not have access to it online (we unfortunately could not justify the £2000 for open access), and can't wait a year, please do email me and I can get you a copy.
The postdoctorate I am working on is part of a larger project
trying to understand how all living cat (felid) species vary particularly with
respect to their muscles, bones and scaling with body size. In modern species
this size range is from 1ish kilos in the black-footed cat and rusty spotted
cat, to 3-4kgs in domestic cats, to the largest male lions and tigers pushing
300kgs.
If we look back in time there were even bigger cat species, with some
of the sabre toothed cats (belonging to the Machiarodontidae) and largest cave
lions pushing 4-500kgs. Despite work being done on other groups’ evolutionary
history (e.g. dogs – Valkenburgh et al., 2004) no-one had yet looked at it in felids,
and this is where this paper comes in.
Body mass ranges of living felids. |
Body mass range of living and extinct felids. |
The next step was finding a database of felid body masses.
For most of the living taxa there is a lot of data known on the body masses (or
at least a range for male and female). These were used to calculate an average
for each species (nearly all of my data came from a coauthor’s previous paper –
Randau et al., 2013). For the remaining species where the data wasn’t readily
available, estimates for body mass were taken from their describing papers, or
from an average calculated from skull length (condylobasalar length – from
snout to vertebral attachment) using an equation calculated from living
species.
Now we have the data for family tree, and for each of their
masses. The next step was to remove all of the species from the tree for which
we didn’t have body masses. When this tree pruning was done, the next step was
to assess the amount of phylogenetic signal in the data - the amount the shape
of the tree, and the position of the species on the tree affect the data. In
simplest terms, you’d expect the most closely related species to have masses
more similar to each other than species that are less closely related. In our
data it turns out there is a lot of phylogenetic signal allowing us to carry
out the next tests, testing mode of evolution that family was undergoing. When
I say mode of evolution, I really mean the way body mass evolves. Initially we
tested for Brownian motion, white, trend, OU and early burst.
Brownian motion is a random walk pattern. Imagine flipping a
coin, heads you increase in body mass, tails you decrease. Over time you could
have all heads, all tails, but more likely a relatively even mix of both the
longer the length of time studied. A white model has no change at all through
the tree. A trend model is best described as a Brownian motion pattern where
there is a directional pattern (e.g. selection that meant only heads were
flipped if going back to our coin analogy). There are some famous models e.g.
Cope’s “rule” which suggests there is an increase in body mass through lineages
in time (not going to discuss the joys of Cope’s rule here as that would be as
long as this post is too). OU (Orstein-Uhlenbeck) models are similar to trend
models initially, so there is a selection pressure encouraging animals to
evolve in a particular direction (e.g. all heads), however once they reach an
optimal position they stay there (i.e. there is stabilising pressure so that
masses stop increasing or decreasing from the optimum). This is often best
described in an adaptive landscape (I am changing analogies here), where
fitness of an animal is described as a hill (or island depending on
preference), if you are at the bottom, you want to get to the top where you are
more optimally adapted for the environment. But once at the top (or above sea
level), it’s disadvantageous for the species to leave this hilltop/island, so
they stay there. Early burst is the final model, where there is a rapid
evolutionary pulse near the origin of the group where all major morphospaces (hills/islands)
are occupied, with then some further expanding (into the small islands) of the range across the rest of
the group’s history. The Cambrian explosion often is cited as a good example of
this.
The test for which model all of these is best is called the
Akaikes information criterion (AIC). A more recent version corrects for finite
sample sizes (as we do not have infinite numbers of samples) and is perhaps
understandably known as the corrected Akaikes information criterion (AICc).
This method compares the probability that a model fits the data and then gives
a likelihood of any model being best (normally displayed as a percentage as in
our results). From this there was the suggestion that an OU model best
described the data for the first occurrence phylogeny, and Brownian models best
explained the mid-, last and modern occurrences. However, with the AICc we
could only test single OU optimum models, and this is where SURFACE and bayou
come in. Both of these packages are plug-ins for R (which is rapidly becoming
the go-to stats program online) independently developed and tested. Both of
these packages allow for testing of multiple OU optima (e.g. a big size and
small size) and whether there is convergence between them.
Using these programs, SURFACE recovered 2 optima for modern
felids, with the Panthera lineages
and Puma evolving to convergent large
body masses, and the rest of the felids staying at smaller sizes. bayou did not
recover any pattern different to that of Brownian motion. The first occurrence
data was probably the most entertaining as far as things I’ve ever written into
results with SURFACE finding a range of optima, including two ridiculous ones:
a large body mass (near the size of Juipiter); and a small body mass (close to
carbon atom size). These are obviously not real optima, although they are
entertaining to consider, and the crazy scale is most likely associated with:
1) the optima being evolved towards have not been reached; 2) the strength of
the selection across the tree (i.e. how quickly things walk or run up their
hills) varies across the tree. Because bayou runs many simulations (I ran
1,000,000 per model) multiple selection strengths could be tested, and the
results found again two optima, a small one and a larger one. The mean and last
occurrence data, both found two convergent optima supporting a large and small
body masses in SURFACE, but this is only also recovered for the last occurrence
data in bayou.
What does this all mean? Well there is some data for Smilodon from the La Brea tar pits
suggesting they do attain larger body masses through evolutionary time. So
despite using average masses (which would hide this signal), there is reason to
believe that the last occurrence results are most realistic and best match what
we see in the modern world. If this is the case, felids evolve two body mass
optima, with large body forms and small body forms. The exact value for these
optima varies depending on the method used, but generally they are divided
somewhere around 5kg and >25kg ranges. The upper body mass limit fits with
previous biomechanical and ecological data showing that large felids
(>25kgs) have to take prey as large or larger than themselves in general to
maintain their energy levels, whilst smaller species tend to take small prey.
From this it may also be able to extend our understanding to some of the
extinct species and what their ecologies were. Our results differed from what
has been found in canids (dogs, foxes, wolves etc.) where there seems to be a
trend towards continued larger body sizes (i.e. Cope’s rule), except in the
foxes which show smaller sizes (Van Valkenburgh et al., 2004; Finarelli, 2007).
It should still be mentioned that despite canids evolving increases in body
size, the largest (at 70kgs in wolves), do not match even the largest living
felids, let alone the incredible size (500kg) found in some of the extinct
species.
References
Cuff et al., 2015.Big cat, small cat: Reconstructing body size evolution in living and extinct Felidae. Journal of Evolutionary Biology. doi: 10.1111/jeb.12671.
Finarelli, J.A. & Goswami, A., 2013. Potential pitfalls
of reconstructing deep time evolutionary history with only extant data, a case
study using the canidae (Mammalia, Carnivora). Evolution 67, 3678-3685.
doi:10.1111/evo.12222
Johnson, W.E., Eizirik, E., Pecon-Slatter, J., Murphy,
W.J., Antunes, A., Teeling E., et al., 2006. The late Miocene radiation of
modern Felidae: a genetic assessment. Science 311:73-77
Piras, P., Maiorino, L., Teresi, L., Meloro, C., Lucci, F., Kotsakis, T., et al.,
2013. Bite of the cats: Relationships between functional integration and
mechanical performance as revealed by mandible geometry. Syst. Biol. 62:
879-900
Tseng, Z.J., Wang, X., Slater, G.J.,
Takeuchi, G.T., Li, Q. & Liu, J. et
al. 2014. Himalayan fossils of the oldest known pantherine establish
ancient origin of big cats. P Roy Soc B-Biol Sci 281 (1774): 20132686.
Van Valkenburgh, B., Wang, X.
& Damuth, J. 2004. Cope’s Rule, hypercarnivory and extinction in North
American canids. Science 306: 101-104.