- publication
- 22-03-2026
How morphological diversity arises from variations in biomechanical processes remains an open question. Although forces shape tissues, how force-generating systems differ across species to create diverse forms is unclear. Here, we combine comparative morphogenesis and active matter theory across six cnidarian species spanning 500 million years of divergence to identify the mechanical basis of larval shape diversity. We define species-specific configurations of mechanical modules-termed mechanotypes-that quantitatively predict larval shapes across taxa. We find that shape elongation is a simple trait at the mesoscale level, as its variation depends on one mechanical module, whereas shape polarity is a complex trait dependent on several modules. Perturbations mimicking interspecies regulatory differences reshape these modules, reprogramming larval morphology into forms resembling sister species. By establishing a mesoscale mechanical framework for cross-species comparison, this work reveals how variations in a limited set of tissue-scale parameters generate morphological diversity.
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