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Mosaic Evolution of brain structure in mammals.

Barton, R.A.; Harvey, P.H.

Authors

P.H. Harvey



Abstract

The mammalian brain comprises a number of functionally distinct systems. It might therefore be expected that natural selection on particular behavioural capacities would have caused size changes selectively, in the systems mediating those capacities. It has been claimed, however, that developmental constraints limited such mosaic evolution, causing co-ordinated size change among individual brain components. Here we analyse comparative data to demonstrate that mosaic change has been an important factor in brain structure evolution. First, the neocortex shows about a fivefold difference in volume between primates and insectivores even after accounting for its scaling relationship with the rest of the brain. Second, brain structures with major anatomical and functional links evolved together independently of evolutionary change in other structures. This is true at the level of both basic brain subdivisions and more fine-grained functional systems. Hence, brain evolution in these groups involved complex relationships among individual brain components.

Citation

Barton, R., & Harvey, P. (2000). Mosaic Evolution of brain structure in mammals. Nature, 405, 1055-1058. https://doi.org/10.1038/35016580

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date 2000-06
Journal Nature
Print ISSN 0028-0836
Publisher Nature Research
Volume 405
Pages 1055-1058
DOI https://doi.org/10.1038/35016580
Keywords brain, evolution, primates