异速滴定
大脑大小
生物
巢穴(蛋白质结构基序)
生态学
系统发育比较方法
结构复杂性
进化生物学
系统发育学
生物化学
医学
基因
放射科
磁共振成像
作者
Shaobin Li,Yuxin Liu,Xiao Du,Guopan Li,Wen Bo Liao
标识
DOI:10.1111/1749-4877.12744
摘要
Abstract Amniotes differ substantially in absolute and relative brain size after controlling for allometry, and numerous hypotheses have been proposed to explain brain size evolution. Brain size is thought to correlate with processing capacity and the brain's ability to support complex manipulation such as nest‐building skills. The increased complexity of nest structure is supposed to be a measure of an ability to manipulate nesting material into the required shape. The degree of nest‐structure complexity is also supposed to be associated with body mass, partly because small species lose heat faster and delicate and insulated nests are more crucial for temperature control of eggs during incubation by small birds. Here, we conducted comparative analyses to test these hypotheses by investigating whether the complexity of species‐typical nest structure can be explained by brain size and body mass (a covariate also to control for allometric effects on brain size) across 1353 bird species from 147 families. Consistent with these hypotheses, our results revealed that avian brain size increases as the complexity of the nest structure increases after controlling for a significant effect of body size, and also that a negative relationship exists between nest complexity and body mass.
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