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Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

Ryan Kerney

Life history evolution

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Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Cell and Developmental Biology

Do Larval Traits Re-Evolve? Evidence From The Embryogenesis Of A Direct-Developing Salamander, Plethodon Cinereus, Ryan Kerney, David Blackburn, Hendrik Muller, James Hanken Dec 2011

Do Larval Traits Re-Evolve? Evidence From The Embryogenesis Of A Direct-Developing Salamander, Plethodon Cinereus, Ryan Kerney, David Blackburn, Hendrik Muller, James Hanken

Ryan Kerney

Recent molecular phylogenies suggest the surprising reacquisition of posthatching metamorphosis within an otherwise directdeveloping clade of lungless salamanders (family Plethodontidae). Metamorphosis was long regarded as plesiomorphic for plethodontids, yet the genus Desmognathus, which primarily includes metamorphosing species, is now nested within a much larger clade of direct-developing species. The extent to which the putative reacquisition of metamorphosis in Desmognathus represents a true evolutionary reversal is contingent upon the extent to which both larva-specific features and metamorphosis were actually lost during the evolution of direct development. In this study we analyze development of the hyobranchial skeleton, which is dramatically remodeled during …


Cranial Ontogeny In Philautus Silus (Anura: Ranidae: Rhacophorinae) Reveals Few Similarities With Other Direct-Developing Anurans, Ryan Kerney, Madhava Meegaskumbura, Kelum Manamendra-Arachchi, James Hanken Dec 2006

Cranial Ontogeny In Philautus Silus (Anura: Ranidae: Rhacophorinae) Reveals Few Similarities With Other Direct-Developing Anurans, Ryan Kerney, Madhava Meegaskumbura, Kelum Manamendra-Arachchi, James Hanken

Ryan Kerney

Direct development has evolved in rhaco- phorine frogs independently from other anuran lineages, thereby offering an opportunity to assess features associ- ated with this derived life history. Using a developmen- tal series of the direct-developing Philautus silus (Ranidae: Rhacophorinae) from Sri Lanka, we examine features of cranial morphology that are part of a suite of adaptations that facilitate feeding in free-living tadpoles, but have been changed or lost in other direct-developing lineages. Larval-specific upper jaw cartilages, which are absent from many non-rhacophorine direct-developing species (such as Eleutherodactylus coqui), develop in embryos of P. silus. Similarly, lower jaw cartilages ini- tially …