Answer:
Facial length is one of the best-known examples of heterochrony. Changes in the timing of facial growth have been invoked as a mechanism for the origin of our short human face from our long-faced extinct relatives. Such heterochronic changes arguably permit great evolutionary flexibility, allowing the mammalian face to be remodeled simply by modifying postnatal growth. Here we present new data that show that this mechanism is significantly constrained by adult size. Small mammals are more brachycephalic (short-faced) than large ones, despite the putative independence between adult size and facial length. This pattern holds across four phenotypic lineages: antelopes, fruit bats, tree squirrels, and mongooses. Despite the apparent flexibility of facial heterochrony, growth of the face is linked to the absolute size and introduces what seems to be a loose but clade-wide mammalian constraint on head shape.
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