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Thorson's rule, life‐history evolution, and diversification of benthic octopuses (Cephalopoda: Octopodoidea)
Ibáñez, C.M.; Rezende, E.L.; Sepúlveda, R.D.; Avaria-Llautureo, J.; Hernández, C.E.; Sellanes, J.; Poulin, E.; Pardo-Gandarillas, M.C. (2018). Thorson's rule, life‐history evolution, and diversification of benthic octopuses (Cephalopoda: Octopodoidea). Evolution 72(9): 1829-1839. https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/evo.13559
In: Evolution. Society for the Study of Evolution: Lancaster. ISSN 0014-3820; e-ISSN 1558-5646, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Octopodoidea A. d'Orbigny, 1839 [WoRMS]
    Marine/Coastal

Authors  Top 
  • Ibáñez, C.M.
  • Rezende, E.L.
  • Sepúlveda, R.D.
  • Avaria-Llautureo, J.
  • Hernández, C.E.
  • Sellanes, J.
  • Poulin, E.
  • Pardo-Gandarillas, M.C.

Abstract
    Here, we evaluate the so-called Thorson's rule, which posits that direct-development and larger eggs are favored toward the poles in marine organisms and whose validity been the subject of considerable debate in the literature, combining an expanded phenotypic dataset encompassing 60 species of benthic octopuses with a new molecular phylogeny. Phylogenetic reconstruction shows two clades: clade 1 including species of the families Eledonidae, Megaleledonidae, Bathypolypodidae, and Enteroctopodidae, and clade 2 including species of Octopodidae. Egg size, development mode, and all environmental variables exhibited phylogenetic signal, partly due to differences between the two clades: whereas most species in clade 1 inhabit cold and deep waters, exhibit large eggs and hatchling with holobenthic development, species from clade 2 inhabit tropical-temperate and shallow waters, evolved small eggs, and generally exhibit merobenthic development. Phylogenetic regressions show that egg size exhibits a conspicuous latitudinal cline, and that both egg size and development mode vary with water temperature. Additionally, analyses suggest that egg size is constrained by body size in lineages with holobenthic development. Taken together, results suggest that the variation in egg size and development mode across benthic octopuses is adaptive and associated with water temperature, supporting Thorson's rule in these organisms.

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