Project: Convergent evolution of functional surfaces in biology: surface structure complexity of lizard skin
2021-10-01 – 2025-09-30
- Abstract
Because they constitute the interface between the organism and its environment, biological surfaces play a vital role in many processes. Recently, new imaging techniques have uncovered that bio-surfaces sport a vast variety of microscale and nanoscale structures that are thought to tailor their interfacing functions. However, exactly how they do that, and why surface ornamentation can differ so dramatically among species, remains heavily unexplored. Using lizard skin as a study model, this project will investigate the functional significance and evolutionary trajectory of fine surface structures using the following integrative approach: (1) Quantifying the structural characteristics of a large number of species facing disparate environmental challenges. (2) Conducting in vivo performance measurements and behavioural observations combined with ex vivo mechanical and optics test to retrieve information on the physical properties and functionality of distinct structural arrangements. (3) Reconstructing the evolutionary history of fine surface structures of lizard skin and assessing the relative importance of convergent versus idiosyncratic evolutionary solutions. The project will combine cutting-edge bio-imaging and functional morphological technology with recent computational and phylogenetic tools. This will be achieved through multilateral interinstitutional collaboration.
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
When adaptation is slowed down : genomic analysis of evolutionary stasis in thermal tolerance during biological invasion in a novel climate
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Foraging mode constrains the evolution of cephalic horns in lizards and snakes
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Foraging mode affects extinction risk of snakes and lizards, but in different ways
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Upper beak depression instead of elevation dominates cranial kinesis in woodpeckers
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Sexual selection and proteinaceous diversity in the femoral gland secretions of lacertid lizards
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Chromosome-level genome assembly of the Cape cliff lizard (Hemicordylus capensis)
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Protein-lipid association in lizard chemical signals
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Introduction history and hybridization determine the hydric balance of an invasive lizard facing a recent climate niche shift
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- Conference Paper
- C3
- open access
Repeated evolution of non-wettable skin surfaces in semi-aquatic lizards
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Rapidly evolved traits enable new conservation tools : perspectives from the cane toad invasion of Australia