Monkeying around with Morphospaces
In my last post, I introduced the concept of a morphospace – the bounded range of possible shape variation that exists for a given trait in either one population of organisms or a trait shared by several related populations of organisms. Morphospaces are crucial to understanding morphological (shape) variation in two important ways: 1) determining how past evolutionary forces have acted to produce a particular morphology, and 2) predicting how current and future evolutionary forces will alter that morphology over time. In this post, I write about studying the first concept in traits that might capture facial shape change in response to climatic variation among macaques. What I found, however, was surprising.
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