12:00 PM - 12:15 PM
[BPT02-06] A unification of absolute growth, allometric, and theoretical morphologic models: a case of molluscan shells
Keywords:theoretical morphology, absolute growth, allometry
The theoretical morphologic model introduced herein is based on a logistic growth model represented by a sigmoid function of time. It is approximately exponential in the early growth stage, but shows a convex upward curve in the later growth stage, and finally approaches the upper bound of the curve. The logistic function can be defined by its initial value, the intrinsic growth rate, and the inflection point of the logistic curve. These parameters describe the rate and timing of growth processes that underlie shell geometries. The theoretical morphologic model is represented by growth of a helicospiral tube which consists of increases in length of the helicospiral, radius of the spiral, height of the helix, and radii of the elliptic cross-section of the tube. Anisomorphic shell growth can be represented by the theoretical morphologic model if growth of each dimension is approximated by a logistic growth function. A total of 14 dimensionless parameters uniquely define the ontogenetic trajectory of a computer-generated shell form. When intrinsic growth rate and the inflection point of the logistic curve are equal among dimensions, shell shape remains constant throughout ontogeny, even though growth rate changes during growth. If the timing of the inflection point of the logistic curve is nearly equal between a pair of dimensions and the intrinsic growth rate is not greatly different between them, the relative growth between the two dimensions can be approximated by an allometric model. Various patterns of ontogenetic variation in shell shape observed in actual mollusks were reproduced by the theoretical model.
The theoretical morphologic model was designed as a forward model for inversion of parameters of the logistic growth function that are ecologically and developmentally important. A computer-generated planispiral shell form with known parameter values which mimics anisomorphic shell growth of an ammonoid was used to generate data for a pilot inversion analysis. A grid search over the 11-dimensional parameter space revealed that the topography of the parameter hyper-space is not intractably complicated, although the global minimum corresponding to the true values of parameters is in a narrow spike.