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Biodiversity and evolution in the light of morphometrics: From patterns to processes

Rémi LAFFONT, Cyril FIRMAT, Paul ALIBERT, Bruno DAVID, Sophie MONTUIRE & Thomas SAUCÈDE

en Comptes Rendus Palevol 10 (2-3) - Pages 133-142

Published on 30 April 2011

This article is a part of the thematic issue The species concept in palaeontology: Ontogeny, variability, evolution

Disparity (shape diversity) is a key aspect of biodiversity, both present and past. The shapes of organisms are usually quantified by means of morphometrics. In this article, after a short review of recent advances and applications of morphometric methods, examples are presented as an overview of morphometric studies undertaken at the Biogéosciences research unit of Burgundy University. They concern both works on shape differentiation and evolution of disparity through time, and work aiming to infer, from the shapes of the organisms, any developmental stresses, constraints or processes which could explain in part the resulting disparity. The objective is to demonstrate how useful morphometrics can be for research in evolutionary and developmental biology.


Keywords:

Biodiversity, Evolution, Shape analysis, Geometric morphometrics

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