Abstract
Avian ceca, a pair of blind sacs arising from the junction of the ileum and colon, are homologous to the cecum in mammals. Cecal size is hypothesized to depend on dietary proclivities and pressures, with faunivorous species having short ceca, whereas herbivorous species have long ceca. Previous tests of this hypothesis, however, did not account for phylogenetic pseudoreplication among closely related taxa. We collated published data on cecal length, dietary category, flying ability, and body mass from 155 avian taxa. Character states were mapped onto a phylogenetic framework, and the permutation tail probability test was used to detect phylogenetic signal in each character. Phylogenetic signal is significant among the characters. As with the cecoappendicular complex in mammals, closely-related birds tend to have similar cecal length. To account for phylogenetic pseudoreplication, we performed phylogenetic generalized least squares regression on cecal length and body mass with dietary category, superordinal-level clade, and flying ability as cofactors. The best-fitting regression model supports the dietary hypothesis for the avian cecum. Among sampled birds of comparable body mass, mean cecal length is significantly longer in herbivorous species than in carnivorous ones (pā=ā0.008), presumably allowing the extraction of nutrients without the burden of fermenting bulky masses of dietary fiber. Exceptions to this trend, however, suggest that avian ceca are functionally complex and may have additional roles in water balance and nitrogen recycling.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
The avian ceca are a pair of blind sacs that arise from the junction of the ileum and colon, and may extend alongside the ileum1,2,3. These structures are highly variable among species of birds. For example, the ceca are short in the Columbidae (pigeons and doves), but they can project a large distance along the ileum in the Galloanserae (fowl)4. However, the causes for this variation remain poorly understood. A homologous structure is found in many mammalian species, the cecum. Smith and colleagues recently proposed the term ācecoappendicular complexā to reflect the fact that the mammalian cecum evolves in concert with its attached appendix5. The cecoappendicular complex has been recently shown not to correlate with diet, social behavior, or any other ecological factor across mammals5,6. Instead, the mammalian cecoappendicular complex exhibits significant phylogenetic signal, such that new phenotypes appear restricted primarily by phylogenetic conservatism across mammals (i.e., the tendency of closely-related species to resemble one another irrespective of the adaptive landscape)5,6,7. This intriguing finding raises the question as to whether the homologues in birds, the ceca, share similar evolutionary conservatism.
Avian ceca span a wide range of morphological types, from essentially absent to small and lymphoid to large and glandular1,4. They serve various diverse functions, including fermentation, water absorption, digestion, and immunity, which may be performed to varying degrees in different species and cecal types. In herbivorous birds that feed on fiber-rich plant material, ceca house microorganisms that presumably assist in the breakdown of fiber through fermentation via anaerobic degradation to ammonia and volatile fatty acids8,9. In order for nutrient absorption to take place in the ceca, particles are refluxed from the rectum into the ceca along with digestive fluid and urine3,10,11. Retrograde urine transport therefore directs uric acid to the site of fermentation, and uric acid is likely to be a major substrate for fermentation. Most microorganisms found within the avian ceca are able to degrade urea and uric acid into carbon dioxide and ammonia, which can be rapidly absorbed and utilized for the production of amino acids and protein3,12,13,14. Maintenance of water balance is another vital function that may be performed by the avian ceca, because sodium and water are reabsorbed there in great abundance15,16,17. Many species also possess a cecal tonsil composed of lymphoid tissue, suggesting the ceca play a role in immune defense18. B and T cells, avian immunoglobulins (IgA, IgG, and IgM), and germinal tissue have been found in the cecal tonsil19,20,21.
In two studies1,4 large surveys of the occurrence of cecal types were conducted across birds. These studies grouped birds by taxonomic order and compiled a list of the occurrence of cecum found in each group, noting the appearance, size, shape, and histological type for each order. Clench & Mathias conducted a broad survey of the occurrence of cecal types, and found no strong correlation between cecal size and taxonomic order, except in those species that were closely related1. Another study by DeGolier and colleagues reviewed the cecal morphology of 154 species of birds and concluded that it is fairly consistent within some orders (e.g., Gruiformes, Cuculiformes, Strigiformes)4. However, both studies found that variation exists within some taxonomic orders, and that overall, diet most likely had the largest effect on cecal variation.
Yet, diet alone does not fully explain cecal morphology because some birds with similar diets have grossly different ceca1. For example, hawks and owls, which have very similar carnivorous diets, differ in cecal morphology. The ceca of owls are quite large and are of a glandular type, whereas those of hawks are smaller and lymphoid1,8. Clench and Mathias1, as well as DeGolier and colleagues4, noted that in some species, other factors (e.g., foodstuff digestibility, water availability, etc.) may be more influential on the presence of ceca than diet alone. Moreover, flying ability may affect cecal morphology; selection for strong flying ability may impose weight-saving constraints expressed in part by reducing cecal size3,9.
None of the preceding studies formally accounted for the effect of phylogeny. The study by DeGolier4, for example, grouped birds by taxonomy rather than by hierarchically-nested clades. Ignoring phylogeny in this way can potentially obfuscate the relationship between form and function22. In fact, a study on models that incorporated phylogenetic information fit the data better than the nonphylogenetic ordinary least squares model23. It has been shown that the mammalian appendix has evolved statistically more times than would be expected by chance alone, suggesting that the appendix has some function in mammals5,6,7. By mapping morphological variation in the cecoappendicular complex onto a phylogenetic tree, Smith and colleagues5,6 identified where the appendix appeared and disappeared throughout evolutionary history. These studies illustrate how phylogeny can be incorporated into analyses of correlated character evolution. However, such an analysis has not yet been conducted on avian ceca to assess whether they depend on phylogeny, dietary category, or both.
Here, we exploit recent advances in comparative methods22,24,25 and avian systematics, such as improved species-level phylogenies based largely on molecular data26,27,28. These advances allow us to re-assess previous conclusions that avian cecal length depends mainly on dietary category1,4 and potentially on flying ability3,9 and phylogeny4.
Results
Assessment of phylogenetic signal
In this sample of 155 avian taxa (TableĀ S1), values of Pagelās lambda for log-transformed body mass and log-transformed cecal length approximate one (pā<ā0.001), consistent with a close fit to Brownian motion evolution (TableĀ 1). In addition, the permutation tail probability (PTP) tests on categorical variables reveal that none of randomly permuted trees had fewer steps than 46 for dietary category and 13 for flying ability (Fig.Ā 1). Therefore, these tests confirm that each continuous and categorical character shows significant phylogenetic signal (pā<ā0.01).
Phylogenetic comparative methods
Regression analysis reveals that models with phylogenetic weighting have substantially stronger evidential support than those without weighting (i.e., OLS: ordinary least squares). The AIC values of simple, additive, and interaction (multiplicative) models with phylogenetic weighting are substantially smaller (better supported) than corresponding OLS models (TableĀ 2). This result is broadly consistent with assessments using Pagelās lambda and the PTP test, and suggests that the data (specifically their residual values) have significant phylogenetic signal.
Based on ĪAIC values (TableĀ 2), the best-supported model of log-transformed cecal length on log-transformed body mass has Ornstein-Uhlenbeck-weighting (Ī±ā=ā0.1697) with superordinal-level clade and dietary category as additive cofactors (Fig.Ā 2). Each clade and dietary category has the same slope (0.348āĀ±ā0.074). It is not significantly different from 0.33 (dfā=ā141; pā=ā0.81), consistent with isometric scaling of linear dimensions on body mass. In addition to body mass, there is a phylogenetic effect on cecal length (TableĀ 3). Galloanserae has significantly longer ceca than Aequorlitornithes (pā<ā0.0001), Columbaves (pā=ā0.0008), or Inopinaves (pā<ā0.0001). Conversely, Inopinaves has significantly shorter ceca than Gruiformes (pā=ā0.005), Aequorlitornithes (pā=ā0.02), or Palaeognathae (pā=ā0.009). Within each clade, some dietary categories further influence cecal length (TableĀ 3). Specifically, ceca are significantly longer in herbivorous, insectivorous, and omnivorous birds than in carnivorous ones (pā=ā0.008, 0.0045, 0.0284, respectively).
An alternative model with Ornstein-Uhlenbeck-weighting (Ī±ā=ā0.172) and flying ability as an additional additive cofactor has substantially less support than the best model (TableĀ 2: ĪAICā=ā3.3). At least in the current sample of birds, flying ability does not significantly affect cecal length (pā>ā0.051).
We could not assess a multiplicative model with different slopes for clade, dietary category, and flying ability due to the small sample size of some categories. However, multiplicative models, each with a single cofactor (either clade, dietary category, or flying ability) generally have less support than corresponding additive models with a single cofactor (TableĀ 2).
Discussion
Cecal length, body mass, dietary categories, and flying ability each show phylogenetic signal. The presence of phylogenetic signal in these characters recommends caution when interpreting previous analyses of these characters based on traditional non-phylogenetic techniques. That stated, our results support the hypothesis linking long ceca to herbivory4. Phylogenetic regression demonstrates that when accounting for body size and clade, herbivory and relatively long ceca are correlated. As suggested in Fig.Ā 3, herbivory evolved independently in Galloanserae and Palaeognathae; in both clades, herbivorous species tend to have long ceca (color-coded green to red). However, exceptions to the general trend (e.g., Opisthocomus hoazin and Fulica americana, and Meleagris gallopavo) suggest that for some species, additional factors other than dietary category may influence cecal length. For example, experimental studies in quail and grouse have shown that ceca elongate as a response to changes in food consumption rates rather than in fiber content29,30. The ceca filter large volumes of food, selecting the fibrous indigestible fraction for frequent excretion while retaining the nutrient-rich liquid fraction for additional processing and absorption. In this way, ceca may be an avian adaptation for efficient processing of ingested food29.
Alternatively as suggested by DeGolier and colleagues4, avian ceca may correlate with water balance and nitrogen recycling. To our knowledge, no phylogenetically-informed analyses have tested the water-balance and nitrogen-cycling hypotheses. Whereas herbivorous species are predicted have large ceca to filter and absorb the nutrient-rich fraction from bulky indigestibles, carnivorous species may also benefit from these organs, which may further process uric acid that forms as a waste product of high protein consumption. Thus, there may be several adaptive pressures selecting for large ceca and herbivory may simply be just one of them.
Interestingly, avian ceca show similar functional and evolutionary patterning to the mammalian cecoappendicular complex. Smith and colleagues5,6 tracked cecoappendicular evolution across mammals, and found no correlation between dietary category and any of the variables associated with the cecum or appendix, including appendix size, appendix presence, cecal morphology, or cecal size. Therefore, they concluded that dietary proclivities alone are not driving cecoappendicular evolution in mammals5,6, just as we have shown that diet alone is not driving cecal evolution in birds. Instead, both the mammalian cecoappendicular complex and avian colic ceca demonstrate significant phylogenetic signal, indicating that behavioral or body size characters are not independent of ancestry. Factors other than diet affect cecoappendicular size and shape, and this is likely true for birds as well. For example, accommodation also plays a role in determining appendix morphology, such that the appendix can change in size and histological composition throughout an individualās lifetime. In humans, for example, the appendix reduces size and changes shape with age, due to loss of lymphoid tissue31,32,33. Future studies could investigate how heritable cecal accommodation is in birds to determine whether its role in the evolution of avian cecal morphology.
Previous studies have hypothesized that the constraints of flight may have led to reduced cecal size and fermentation capabilities in flighted birds3,34. Our analyses did not detect a correlation between cecal length and flying ability across the sample, suggesting that flight is not an inherently limiting factor for cecal length. It is possible, however, that other measures of cecal size and capabilities not included here, such as cecal volume, may be the variable limiting flight.
Methods
Sampling
We used the framework of a recently published avian phylogeny, which is based on conserved regions in 259 nuclear genes across 198 avian species28. Dense taxonomic sampling of non-passerine birds clarifies controversial relationships, particularly deep nodes towards the base of crown-group Aves27,28. For superficial nodes, we relied on the topology of a recent supertree containing approximately 5000 species26. This supertree was assembled using source trees that were recovered mostly from molecular data, with cytochrome b sequencing being the largest contributor (38.9% of source trees). Far fewer source trees came from morphological characters, with 0.004% of source trees based on digestive morphological data. A shortcoming of the supertrees is the lack of accurate branch-length information. In lieu of this information, we estimated branch lengths in our composite phylogenetic topology using Pagelās method35, which generates arbitrary ultrametric (time-proportional) branches. Assembly of the composite phylogeny was performed using Mesquite Phylogenetic Software36 (v. 3.51).
Onto these phylogenies, we mapped morphological, dietary, and flight ability data from 155 avian species4,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46 (TableĀ S1). Morphological data consist of cecal length and body mass, both of which have strong right-skewed distributions that violate normality assumed by many statistical analyses. To better approximate the normal distribution, body mass and cecal length data were log-transformed. A small constant (0.1ācm) was added to cecal length data before log-transformation to avoid calculating undefined values. Primary dietary category was assigned for each species using cadaveric dissection and analysis of stomach contents (e.g., herbivoreāgreens, including the leaves of aquatic and terrestrial plants, comprise at least 50% of the stomach contents)4. In the absence of stomach contents, data from the literature were used. Primary dietary category was coded as a multi-state factor (herbivore, carnivore: aquatic invertebrates, carnivore: vertebrates, granivore/frugivore, insectivore, nectarivore, and omnivore). Flight ability was coded as a multi-state factor (strong flyer, weak flyer, flightless). All data collected and analyzed during this study are included in this published article (and accompanying Supplementary Information files, DataĀ S1 and TableĀ S1).
Assessment of phylogenetic signal
Comparative data as described above are results of evolution and phylogenetic processes. Such data may show strong phylogenetic signal and violate the assumption that data points are statistically independent as required in many traditional statistical techniques (e.g., pairwise comparisons or regression)22. There are different methods to test for phylogenetic signal in continuous and categorical characters.
We assessed phylogenetic signal in continuous characters such as log-cecal length and log-body mass using the package āphytoolsā47 written for R48. This package implements Pagelās lambda, which estimates the transformation needed to fit a Brownian phylogenetic model to the character data49. Pagelās lambda typically ranges between zero (characters are independent of phylogeny) and one (characters evolved following Brownian motion); lambda greater than one is possible if traits are more similar than expected by Brownian motion. Unlike alternative measures of phylogenetic signal (e.g., Blombergās K), Pagelās lambda seems robust to phylogenies with suboptimal branch-length information50 as is the case with the composite avian phylogeny. The null hypothesis (no phylogenetic signal) was rejected if the p-value was less 0.05.
To assess phylogenetic signal in categorical characters (diet and flight), we performed a permutation tail probability (PTP) test51 using Mesquite36. The minimum number of evolutionary changes (steps or tree length) required to explain the distribution of each character across the original tree was recorded. Two sets of randomized trees were generated using the settings uniform (yule) speciation (with a tree depth of ten) and parsimony character steps. The first set included 999 permutations and the second included 9,999 permutations. Character data were mapped onto the random topologies in each simulation and the number of evolutionary steps was recorded. This procedure permits the character distributions across the real phylogenetic tree to be compared to a random distribution, in order to determine whether the actual character distribution was significantly different than would be expected by chance alone. To calculate a p-value for each character, we counted the number of permutations with a tree length less than or equal to the observed length and divided by the total number of permutations52. Note that if none of the permutated data sets were as short or shorter than the observed values, we reported the p-value as 10 divided by the number of permutationsāthat is the probability of a Type I error is very small but not zero53. The null hypothesis (no phylogenetic signal) was rejected if the proportion of permutated data sets with tree lengths as short or shorter than the original data set was less than 0.0554.
Phylogenetic comparative methods
We assessed relationships among cecal length, body mass, and various factors, using increasingly complex sets of regression models in the following order. In the first set, we evaluated log-transformed cecal length (dependent variable) regressed on log-transformed body mass (independent variable)āsimple allometry. The second set consists of regressions in which categorical factors (i.e., dietary category, superordinal-level clade, and flying ability) were modeled as additive effects in isolation as well as in combination. The final set consists of models with the categorical factors as interactive (multiplicative) effects. Unfortunately, small sample size in various categories precluded the evaluation interactive effects beyond isolated factors.
Regressions were performed using phylogenetic generalized least squares (PGLS)24,25 with the āapeā55 and ānlmeā56 package in R48. PGLS uses weighting to ācorrectā for non-independence of residual variation among data points57. Weighting is in the form of a variance-covariance matrix based on the sample phylogeny and model of evolution. Three models of evolution are commonly assumed in comparative analyses: (1) no evolutionāall taxa are statistically independent23; (2) Brownian motion evolutionāvariance among related taxa increases linearly with time58; and (3) Ornstein-Uhlenbeck evolutionāvariance among related taxa increases exponentially with time59. We repeated PGLS regressions using each method of weighting.
Regression models differ in their complexity and fit to the data, so we compared them using Akaikeās Information Criterion (AIC). In general, the best supported model has the lowest AIC value60. Relative support between the best model and alternative models was assessed with difference (ĪAIC) values. Alternative models with ĪAIC values of at least 3, which is equivalent to a p-value of 0.05161, were rejected as substantially weaker than the best model.
References
Clench, M. H. & Mathias, J. R. The avian cecum: a review. Wilson Bull. 107, 93ā121 (1995).
McLelland, J. Anatomy of the avian cecum. J. Exp. Zool. 252, 2ā9 (1989).
Svihus, B., Choct, M. & Classen, H. L. Function and nutritional roles of the avian caeca: a review. Worlds Poult. Sci. J. 69, 249ā264 (2013).
DeGolier, T. F., Mahoney, S. A. & Duke, G. E. Relationships of avian cecal lengths to food habits, taxonomic position, and intestinal lengths. Condor Ornithol. Appl. 101, 622ā634 (1999).
Smith, H. F., Parker, W., KotzĆ©, S. H. & Laurin, M. Morphological evolution of the mammalian cecum and cecal appendix. Comptes Rendus Palevol 16, 39ā57 (2017).
Smith, H. F., Parker, W., KotzĆ©, S. H. & Laurin, M. Multiple independent appearances of the cecal appendix in mammalian evolution and an investigation of related ecological and anatomical factors. Comptes Rendus Palevol 12, 339ā354 (2013).
Smith, H. F. et al. Comparative anatomy and phylogenetic distribution of the mammalian cecal appendix. J. Evol. Biol. 22, 1984ā1999 (2009).
Annison, E. F., Hill, K. J. & Kenworthy, R. Volatile fatty acids in the digestive tract of the fowl. Br. J. Nutr. 22, 207ā216 (1968).
Mead, G. C. Microbes of the avian cecum: types present and substrates utilized. J. Exp. Zool. 252, 48ā54 (1989).
Akester, A. R., Anderson, R. S., Hill, K. J. & Osbaldiston, G. W. A radiographic study of urine flow in the domestic fowl. Br. Poult. Sci. 8, 209ā215 (1967).
Bjƶrnhag, G. & Sperber, I. Transport of various food components through the digestive tract of turkeys, geese and guinea fowl. Swed. J. Agric. Res. 7, 57ā66 (1977).
Barnes, E. M., Mead, G. C., Barnuml, D. A. & Harry, E. G. The intestinal flora of the chicken in the period 2 to 6 weeks of age, with particular reference to the anaerobic bacteria. Br. Poult. Sci. 13, 311ā326 (1972).
Braun, E. J. & Campbell, C. E. Uric acid decomposition in the lower gastrointestinal tract. J. Exp. Zool. 252, 70ā74 (1989).
Karasawa, Y. Ammonia production from uric acid, urea, and amino acids and its absorption from the ceca of the cockerel. J. Exp. Zool. 252, 75ā80 (1989).
Browne, T. G. Some Observations on the Digestive System of the Fowl. J. Comp. Pathol. Ther. 35, 12ā32 (1922).
Maisonnier, S., Gomez, J., Chagneau, A. M. & CarrĆ©, B. Analysis of variability in nutrient digestibilities in broiler chickens. Br. Poult. Sci. 42, 70ā76 (2001).
Thomas, D. H. Salt and water excretion by birds: the lower intestine as an integrator of renal and intestinal excretion. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. A Physiol. 71, 527ā535 (1982).
Clench, M. H. The avian cecum: update and motility review. J. Exp. Zool. 283, 441ā447 (1999).
Bienenstock, J., Gauldie, J. & Perey, D. Y. E. Synthesis of IgG, IgA, IgM by chicken tissues: immunofluorescent and 14C amino acid incorporation studies. J. Immunol. 111, 1112 (1973).
Kaiser, P. & Balic, A. The avian immune system. In Sturkieās Avian Physiology (ed. Scanes, C. G.) 403ā418, https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-407160-5.00017-8 (Academic Press, 2015).
Lebacq-Verheyden, A.-M., Vaerman, J. P. & Heremans, J. F. Immunohistologic distribution of the chicken immunoglobulins. J. Immunol. 109, 652 (1972).
Nunn, C. L. & Barton, R. A. Comparative methods for studying primate adaptation and allometry. Evol. Anthropol. 10, 81ā98 (2001).
Lavin, S. R., Karasov, W. H., Ives, A. R., Middleton, K. M. & Garland, T. Jr. Morphometrics of the avian small intestine compared with that of nonflying mammals: a phylogenetic approach. Physiol. Biochem. Zool. 81, 526ā550 (2008).
Grafen, A. The phylogenetic regression. Philos. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. B 326, 119ā157 (1989).
Symonds, M. R. E. & Blomberg, S. P. A primer on phylogenetic generalised least squares. In Modern Phylogenetic Comparative Methods and Their Application in Evolutionary Biology (ed. Garamszegi, L. Z.) 105ā130, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-43550-2_5 (Springer, 2014).
Davis, K. E. & Page, R. D. M. Reweaving the tapestry: a supertree of birds. PLoS Curr. 6, ecurrents.tol.c1af68dda7c999ed9f1e4b2d2df7a08e (2014).
Jarvis, E. D. et al. Whole-genome analyses resolve early branches in the tree of life of modern birds. Science 346, 1320ā1331 (2014).
Prum, R. O. et al. A comprehensive phylogeny of birds (Aves) using targeted next-generation DNA sequencing. Nature 526, 569ā573 (2015).
Fenna, L. & Boag, D. A. Adaptive significance of the caeca in Japanese quail and spruce grouse (Galliformes). Can. J. Zool. 52, 1577ā1584 (1974).
Remington, T. E. Why do grouse have ceca? A test of the fiber digestion theory. J. Exp. Zool. 252, 87ā94 (1989).
Fisher, R. E. The primate appendix: A reassessment. Anat. Rec. 261, 228ā236 (2000).
Greenberg, S. R. The aged human appendix: its structure and iron content. Gerontol. Clin. (Basel) 12, 366ā376 (1970).
Williams, R. S. Appendicitis: historical milestones and current challenges. Med. J. Aust. 157, 784ā787 (1992).
JĆ³zefiak, D., Rutkowski, A. & Martin, S. Carbohydrate fermentation in the avian ceca: a review. Anim. Feed Sci. Technol. 113, 1ā15 (2004).
Pagel, M. D. A method for the analysis of comparative data. J. Theor. Biol. 156, 431ā442 (1992).
Maddison, W. P. & Maddison, D. R. Mesquite: a modular system for evolutionary analysis (2018).
Myers, P. et al. The Animal Diversity Web (online) Available at: https://animaldiversity.org.
Fowler, M. E. Comparative clinical anatomy of ratites. J. Zoo Wildl. Med. 22, 204ā227 (1991).
Herd, R. M. & Dawson, T. J. Fiber digestion in the emu, Dromaius novaehollandiae, a large bird with a simple gut and high rates of passage. Physiol. Zool. 57, 70ā84 (1984).
Potter, M. A. et al. Gastrointestinal tract of the brown kiwi (Apteryx mantelli). J. Zool. 270, 429ā436 (2006).
Cho, P., Brown, R. & Anderson, M. Comparative gross anatomy of ratites. Zoo Biol. 3, 133ā144 (1984).
Chikilian, M. & de Speroni, N. B. Comparative study of the digestive system of three species of tinamou. I. Crypturellus tataupa, Nothoprocta cinerascens, and Nothura maculosa (Aves: Tinamidae). J. Morphol. 228, 77ā88 (1996).
Tubaro, P. L. & Bertelli, S. Female-biased sexual size dimorphism in tinamous: a comparative test fails to support Renschās rule. Biol. J. Linn. Soc. 80, 519ā527 (2003).
Lancaster, D. A. Biology of the Brushland Tinamou, Nothoprocta cinerascens. Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist. 127, 229ā314 (1964).
Garitano-Zavala, Ć., Nadal, J. & Ćvila, P. The feeding ecology and digestive tract morphology of two sympatric tinamous of the high plateau of the Bolivian Andes: the Ornate Tinamou (Nothoprocta ornata) and the Darwinās Nothura (Nothura darwinii). Ornitol. Neotropical 14, 173ā194 (2003).
Silva, F. & Sander, M. Estudio sobre a alimentaƧao de perdiz (Nothura maculosa) (Temminck, 1815) no Rio Grande do Sul, Brasil (Aves, Tinamiformes, Tinamidae). Iheringia 58, 65ā77 (1981).
Revell, L. J. Phytools: an R package for phylogenetic comparative biology (and other things). Methods Ecol. Evol. 3, 217ā223 (2012).
R Core Team. R: A language and environment for statistical computing. (R Foundation for Statistical Computing, 2018).
Pagel, M. Inferring the historical patterns of biological evolution. Nature 401, 877ā884 (1999).
Molina-Venegas, R. & RodrĆguez, M. Ć. Revisiting phylogenetic signal; strong or negligible impacts of polytomies and branch length information? BMC Evol. Biol. 17, 53 (2017).
Faith, D. P. & Cranston, P. S. Could a cladogram this short have arisen by chance alone?: on permutation tests for cladistic structure. Cladistics 7, 1ā28 (1991).
Slowinski, J. B. & Crother, B. I. Is the PTP test useful? Cladistics 14, 297ā302 (1998).
Ives, A. R. & Garland, T., Jr. Phylogenetic regression for binary dependent variables. In Modern Phylogenetic Comparative Methods and Their Application in Evolutionary Biology (ed. Garamszegi, L. Z.) 231ā261 (Springer, 2014).
Wilkinson, M., Peres-Neto, P. R., Foster, P. G. & Moncrieff, C. B. Type 1 error rates of the parsimony permutation tail probability test. Syst. Biol. 51, 524ā527 (2002).
Paradis, E., Claude, J. & Strimmer, K. APE: analyses of phylogenetics and evolution in R language. Bioinformatics 20, 289ā290 (2004).
Pinheiro, J., Bates, D., DebRoy, S. & Sarkar, D. R Core Team. nlme: Linear and Nonlinear Mixed Effects Models. (2018).
Revell, L. J. Phylogenetic signal and linear regression on species data. Methods Ecol. Evol. 1, 319ā329 (2010).
Felsenstein, J. Phylogenies and the comparative method. Am. Nat. 125, 1ā15 (1985).
Hansen, T. F. Stabilizing selection and the comparative analysis of adaptation. Evolution 51, 1341ā1351 (1997).
Burnham, K. P. & Anderson, D. R. Model selection and multimodel inference: a practical information-theoretic approach. (Springer-Verlag, 2002).
Taper, M. L. Model identification from many candidates. In The Nature of Scientific Evidence: Statistical, Philosophical, and Empirical Considerations (eds Taper, M. L. & Lele, S. R.) 488ā524 (University of Chicago Press, 2004).
Acknowledgements
Funding for this research was provided by the Biomedical Sciences program, Midwestern University. We thank Argo Portoff, Derek Reid, and Northwing Game Farm for the specimens. The authors wish to thank Dr. Tobias Riede for his contribution and insight to the project, and Avery Williams, Kelly Ezell, and Amanda Kuehn for their assistance with this project. This is Midwestern University Arizona Research Collection for Integrative Vertebrate Education and Study (ARCIVES) Publication #3.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
H.F.S. and A.L. conceived of the project. A.L., L.A. and H.F.S. developed the project concept. A.H. collected the data. A.H., A.L. and H.F.S. performed the analyses. All authors interpreted the results. A.H., A.L. and H.F.S. wrote the paper. A.H. prepared Fig. 1. A.L. prepared Figs 2 & 3. All authors reviewed the manuscript.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing Interests
The authors declare no competing interests.
Additional information
Publisherās note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the articleās Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the articleās Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
About this article
Cite this article
Hunt, A., Al-Nakkash, L., Lee, A.H. et al. Phylogeny and herbivory are related to avian cecal size. Sci Rep 9, 4243 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-40822-0
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-40822-0
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.