Morphological convergence obscures functional diversity in sabre-toothed carnivores

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The acquisition of elongated, sabre-like canines in multiple vertebrate cladesduring the last 265 Myr represents a remarkable example for convergentevolution. Due to striking superficial similarities in the cranial skeleton,the same or similar skull and jaw functions have been inferred for sabre-toothed species and interpreted as an adaptation to subdue large-bodiedprey. However, although some sabre-tooth lineages have been classifiedinto different ecomorphs (dirk-tooths and scimitar-tooths) the functionaldiversity within and between groups and the evolutionary paths leadingto these specializations are unknown. Here, we use a suite of biomechanicalsimulations to analyse key functional parameters (mandibular gape angle,bending strength, bite force) to compare the functional performance ofdifferent groups and to quantify evolutionary rates across sabre-tooth ver-tebrates. Our results demonstrate a remarkably high functional diversitybetween sabre-tooth lineages and that different cranial function and preykilling strategies evolved within clades. Moreover, different biomechanicaladaptations in coexisting sabre-tooth species further suggest that thisfunctional diversity was at least partially driven by niche partitioning

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Lautenschlager S, Figueirido B, Cashmore DD, Bendel E-M, Stubbs TL. 2020 Morphological convergence obscures functional diversity in sabre-toothed carnivores. Proc. R. Soc. B 287: 20201818. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2020.1818

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