Automated Author ProfileHerrel, Anthony
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
Herrel, Anthony
Current S-Index
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S-Index Interpretation
The S-Index (Sharing Index) is a comprehensive metric that represents the cumulative impact of all your datasets. It is calculated as the sum of Dataset Index scores across all your claimed datasets.
What it means:
- A higher S-index indicates greater overall impact of your datasets relative to typical datasets in their fields of research
- The S-Index grows as you add more datasets or as existing datasets gain more citations and mentions
- It provides a single number to track your research data impact over time
Current S-Index: 14.7 (sum of 7 datasets Dataset Index scores)
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Datasets
Differences in habitat use impose ecological constraints which in turn lead to functional and morphological differences through adaptation. In fact, a convergent evolutionary pattern is evident when species exhibit similar responses to similar environments. In this study we examine how habitat use influences the evolution of body shape in lizards from the family Lacertidae. We divided our species set into two categories: ground-dwellers and climbers, which encompasses the verticality and horizontality aspects of the habitat. We performed phylogenetic comparative analyses employing 186 species and seven linear morphological traits. Our results show contrasting patterns between head and limb shape, which are considered distinct functional blocks. We observed differences in forelimb proportions, but not in hindlimb length, contrary to what was documented in other lizard groups, demonstrating a novel axis in the limb-locomotion-habitat relationship in this family. In addition, a clear effect of habitat use on head shape was detected. We observed that climbing species present on average flatter heads than ground-dwelling species, as well as different evolutionary trajectories. These findings suggest the complex interplay between habitat use and morphological evolution in lizards, highlighting how distinct selective pressures drive divergent adaptations in different functional traits.
Authors
- Vicent, Pablo ;
- Kaliontzopoulou, Antigoni ;
- Herrel, Anthony
Access to resources is a dynamic and multi-causal process that determines the success and survival of a population. It is therefore often challenging to disentangle the factors affecting ecological traits like diet. Insular habitats provide a good opportunity to study how variation in diet originates, in particular in populations of mesopredators such as lizards. Indeed, high levels of population density associated with low food abundance and low predation are selection pressures typically observed on islands. In the present study, the diet of eighteen insular populations of two closely related species of lacertid lizards (Podarcis sicula and Podarcis melisellensis) was assessed. Our results reveal that despite dietary variability among populations, diet taxonomic diversity is not impacted by island area. In contrast, however, diet disparity metrics, based on the variability in the physical (hardness) and behavioral (evasiveness) properties of ingested food items, are correlated with island size. These findings suggest that an increase in intraspecific competition for access to resources may induce shifts in functional components of the diet. Additionally, the two species differed in the relation between diet disparity and island area suggesting that different strategies exist to deal with low food abundance in these two species. Finally, sexual dimorphism in diet and head dimensions is not greater on smaller islands, in contrast to our predictions.
Authors
- Taverne, Maxime ;
- Fabre, Anne-Claire ;
- King-Gillies, Nina ;
- Krajnović, Marija ;
- Lisičić, Duje ;
- Martin, Louise ;
- Michal, Leslie ;
- Petricioli, Donat ;
- Stambuk, Anamaria ;
- Tadić, Zoran ;
- Vigliotti, Chloé ;
- Wehrle, Beck ;
- Herrel, Anthony
Hurricanes are catastrophically destructive. Beyond their toll on human life and livelihoods, hurricanes have massive and often long-lasting effects on ecological systems. Despite many examples of mass mortality events following hurricanes, hurricane-induced natural selection has never been demonstrated. Immediately after we finished a survey of Anolis scriptus, a common, small-bodied lizard found throughout the Turks and Caicos archipelago, our study populations were battered by Hurricanes Irma and Maria. Shortly thereafter, we revisited the populations to determine whether morphological traits related to clinging capacity had shifted in the intervening six weeks and found that surviving lizards differed in body size, relative limb length and toepad size from those present before the storm. Our serendipitous study, the first to employ an immediate before-after comparison to test this question, demonstrates that hurricanes can induce phenotypic change in a population, and strongly implicates natural selection as the cause. In the decades ahead, as extreme climate events are predicted to become more intense and prevalent, our understanding of evolutionary dynamics needs to incorporate the impact of these potentially severe selective episodes.
Authors
- Donihue, Colin M. ;
- Herrel, Anthony ;
- Fabre, Anne-Claire ;
- Kamath, Ambika ;
- Geneva, Anthony J. ;
- Schoener, Thomas W. ;
- Kolbe, Jason J. ;
- Losos, Jonathan B.
The head is a complex integrated system that is implicated in many vital functions. As such, its morphology is impacted by different and sometimes conflicting demands. Consequently, head shape varies greatly depending on the environment and dietary ecology of an organism. Moreover, given its role in territory defence and mating in lizards, it is also subjected to strong sexual selection in these animals. We investigated the relationships between head shape, bite performance and diet in 14 of the 17 extant Bradypodion species to determine whether variation in diet can explain the observed diversity in bite force and head shape in this genus. We also evaluate differences between sexes in terms of the relationships between head shape, bite force and diet and predict tighter relationships in females given that the head in this sex is principally under natural selection. Our results show that there is indeed a correlation between head shape, diet and bite force, but the direction and magnitude are sex-dependent. Whereas we observed a correlation between absolute bite force and head shape in both sexes, size-corrected bite force was correlated with mandible and quadrate shape in females only. Despite strong correlations between bite force and prey hardness, and between prey hardness and head shape, we did not find any relationship between head shape and prey evasiveness. These data suggest that the cranial system in chameleons of the genus Bradypodion evolves under natural selection for the ability to eat large or hard prey. Moreover, significant differences in the ecomorphological relationships between the two sexes suggest that sexual selection plays a role in driving the evolution of bite force and head shape. These data suggest that ecomorphological relationships may be sex-dependent.
Authors
- Dollion, Alexis Y. ;
- Measey, G. John ;
- Cornette, Raphael ;
- Carne, Liza ;
- Tolley, Krystal A. ;
- da Silva, Jessica M. ;
- Boistel, Renaud ;
- Fabre, Anne-Claire ;
- Herrel, Anthony
Organisms are organized into suites of anatomical structures that typically covary when developmentally or functionally related, and this morphological integration plays a determinant role in evolutionary processes. Artificial selection on domestic species causes strong morphological changes over short time spans, frequently resulting in a wide and exaggerated phenotypic diversity. This raises the question of whether integration constrains the morphological diversification of domestic species and how natural and artificial selection may impact integration patterns. Here, we study the morphological integration in the appendicular skeleton of domestic horses and donkeys, using three-dimensional geometric morphometrics on 75 skeletons. Our results indicate that a strong integration is inherited from developmental mechanisms which interact with functional factors. This strong integration reveals a specialization in the locomotion of domestic equids, partly for running abilities. We show that the integration is stronger in horses than in donkeys, probably because of a greater degree of specialization and predictability of their locomotion. Thus, the constraints imposed by integration are weak enough to allow important morphological changes and the phenotypic diversification of domestic species.
Authors
- Hanot, Pauline ;
- Herrel, Anthony ;
- Guintard, Claude ;
- Cornette, Raphaël
Phenotypic traits may be linked to speciation in two distinct ways: character values may influence the rate of speciation or diversification in the trait may be associated with speciation events. Traits involved in signal transmission, such as the dewlap of Anolis lizards, are often involved in the speciation process. The dewlap is an important visual signal with roles in species recognition and sexual selection, and dewlaps vary among species in relative size as well as colour and pattern. We compile a dataset of relative dewlap size digitized from photographs of 184 anole species from across the genus' geographical range. We use phylogenetic comparative methods to test two hypotheses: that larger dewlaps are associated with higher speciation rates, and that relative dewlap area diversifies according to a speciational model of evolution. We find no evidence of trait-dependent speciation, indicating that larger signals do not enhance any role the dewlap has in promoting speciation. Instead, we find a signal of mixed speciational and gradual trait evolution, with a particularly strong signal of speciational change in the dewlaps of mainland lineages. This indicates that dewlap size diversifies in association with the speciation process, suggesting that divergent selection may play a role in the macroevolution of this signalling trait.
Authors
- Ingram, Travis ;
- Harrison, Alexis ;
- Mahler, D. Luke ;
- Castañeda, María del Rosario ;
- Glor, Richard E. ;
- Herrel, Anthony ;
- Stuart, Yoel E. ;
- Losos, Jonathan B.
Evolutionary trajectories are often biased by developmental and historical factors. However, environmental factors can also impose constraints on the evolutionary trajectories of organisms leading to convergence of morphology in similar ecological contexts. The physical properties of water impose strong constraints on aquatic feeding animals by generating pressure waves that can alert prey and potentially push them away from the mouth. These hydrodynamic constraints have resulted in the independent evolution of suction feeding in most groups of secondarily aquatic tetrapods. Despite the fact that snakes cannot use suction they have invaded the aquatic milieu many times independently. Here we test whether the aquatic environment has constrained head shape evolution in snakes and whether shape converges on that predicted by biomechanical models. To do so, we used 3D geometric morphometrics and comparative, phylogenetically informed analyses on a large sample of aquatic snake species. Our results show that aquatic snakes partially conform to our predictions and have a narrower anterior part of the head and dorsally positioned eyes and nostrils. This morphology is observed irrespective of the phylogenetic relationships among species suggesting that the aquatic environment does indeed drive the evolution of head shape in snakes, thus biasing the evolutionary trajectory of this group of animals.
Authors
- Segall, Marion ;
- Cornette, Raphaël ;
- Fabre, Anne-Claire ;
- Godoy-Diana, Ramiro ;
- Herrel, Anthony