Litcius/Paper detail

Sexual selection promotes giraffoid head-neck evolution and ecological adaptation

Shiqi Wang, Jie Ye, Jin Meng, Chunxiao Li, Loïc Costeur, Bastien Mennecart, Chi Zhang, Ji Zhang, Manuela Aiglstorfer, Yang Wang, Yan Wu, Wen-Yu Wu, Tao Deng

2022Science41 citationsDOI

Abstract

The long neck of the giraffe has been held as a classic example of adaptive evolution since Darwin’s time. Here we report on an unusual fossil giraffoid, Discokeryx xiezhi , from the early Miocene, which has an unusual disk-shaped headgear and the most complicated head-neck joints in known mammals. The distinctive morphology and our finite element analyses indicate an adaptation for fierce head-butting behavior. Tooth enamel isotope data suggest that D. xiezhi occupied a niche different from that of other herbivores, comparable to the characteristic high-level browsing niche of modern giraffes. The study shows that giraffoids exhibit a higher headgear diversity than other ruminants and that living in specific ecological niches may have fostered various intraspecific combat behaviors that resulted in extreme head-neck morphologies in different giraffoid lineages.

Topics & Concepts

Ecological nicheAdaptation (eye)NicheBiologyIntraspecific competitionEvolutionary biologyEcologyHerbivoreNiche differentiationUngulateHead (geology)HabitatPaleontologyNeuroscienceEvolution and Paleontology StudiesPaleontology and Evolutionary BiologyAnimal Ecology and Behavior Studies