Functional innovation promotes diversification of form in the evolution of an ultrafast trap-jaw mechanism in ants

Evolutionary innovations underlie the rise of diversity and complexity-the 2 long-term trends in the history of life. How does natural selection redesign multiple interacting parts to achieve a new emergent function? We investigated the evolution of a biomechanical innovation, the latch-spring mecha...

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Veröffentlicht in:PLoS biology 2021-03, Vol.19 (3), p.e3001031-e3001031
Hauptverfasser: Booher, Douglas B, Gibson, Joshua C, Liu, Cong, Longino, John T, Fisher, Brian L, Janda, Milan, Narula, Nitish, Toulkeridou, Evropi, Mikheyev, Alexander S, Suarez, Andrew V, Economo, Evan P
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Evolutionary innovations underlie the rise of diversity and complexity-the 2 long-term trends in the history of life. How does natural selection redesign multiple interacting parts to achieve a new emergent function? We investigated the evolution of a biomechanical innovation, the latch-spring mechanism of trap-jaw ants, to address 2 outstanding evolutionary problems: how form and function change in a system during the evolution of new complex traits, and whether such innovations and the diversity they beget are repeatable in time and space. Using a new phylogenetic reconstruction of 470 species, and X-ray microtomography and high-speed videography of representative taxa, we found the trap-jaw mechanism evolved independently 7 to 10 times in a single ant genus (Strumigenys), resulting in the repeated evolution of diverse forms on different continents. The trap mechanism facilitates a 6 to 7 order of magnitude greater mandible acceleration relative to simpler ancestors, currently the fastest recorded acceleration of a resettable animal movement. We found that most morphological diversification occurred after evolution of latch-spring mechanisms, which evolved via minor realignments of mouthpart structures. This finding, whereby incremental changes in form lead to a change of function, followed by large morphological reorganization around the new function, provides a model for understanding the evolution of complex biomechanical traits, as well as insights into why such innovations often happen repeatedly.
ISSN:1545-7885
1544-9173
1545-7885
DOI:10.1371/journal.pbio.3001031