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Frontiers in zoology. 2025 Mar 11;22(1):5. doi: 10.1186/s12983-025-00556-4 Q12.62024

Cranial morphology in flying squirrels: diet, shape, and size disparity across tropical and temperate biomes

飞鼠的颅形:热带和温带生态系统中的饮食、形状及大小差异性 翻译改进

Álvaro Quesada  1, Manuel Hernández Fernández  2  3, Iris Menéndez  4

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作者单位

  • 1 Departamento de Geodinámica, Estratigrafía y Paleontología, Facultad de Ciencias Geológicas, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, C/ José Antonio Nováis 2, 28040, Madrid, Spain. alvarque@ucm.es.
  • 2 Departamento de Geodinámica, Estratigrafía y Paleontología, Facultad de Ciencias Geológicas, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, C/ José Antonio Nováis 2, 28040, Madrid, Spain.
  • 3 Departamento de Cambio Medioambiental, Instituto de Geociencias (UCM, CSIC), C/ Severo Ochoa 7, 28040, Madrid, Spain.
  • 4 Museum für Naturkunde , Leibniz Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity Science, Invalidenstrasse 43, 10115, Berlin, Germany. iris.menendez@mfn.berlin.
  • DOI: 10.1186/s12983-025-00556-4 PMID: 40065409

    摘要 Ai翻译

    Background: Species richness increases gradually as latitude decreases, however, the explanation for this phenomenon remains unclear. Ecological hypotheses suggest that greater niche diversity in tropical biomes may facilitate the coexistence of a larger number of species. The close relationship between species morphology and ecology can lead to a greater morphological disparity in tropical biomes.

    Methods: In this study, we used 2D geometric morphometric techniques on the ventral view of the cranium of flying squirrels (Pteromyini, Sciuridae) to determine the relationship between diet and cranial morphology and to evaluate if morphological disparity is higher in tropical biomes.

    Results: The results show that diet has a significant impact on cranial shape and size, with large, wide and robust crania in folivorous and generalist species, while frugivorous species tend towards smaller and narrower crania, and nucivorous have a wide variability. This suggests that biomes with more available dietary niches would show greater morphological disparity. However, we found no statistical differences in shape and size disparity among biomes or between observed and simulated disparity based on species richness.

    Conclusions: Our results show that there are not disparity differences between tropical and temperate biomes, even when temperate biomes are less rich than tropical ones, suggesting that the quantity of available niches may not be the key factor in generating morphological disparity. Instead, it could be the presence of extreme niches that demand specialised adaptations for exploitation, which might be of greater significance. A greater importance of size-changing adaptations would decrease shape disparity in biomes with many niches.

    Keywords: Allometry; Biomes; Diet; Flying squirrels; Geometric morphometrics; Morphology; Skull.

    Keywords:flying squirrels; cranial morphology; diet; tropical biomes; temperate biomes

    Copyright © Frontiers in zoology. 中文内容为AI机器翻译,仅供参考!

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    期刊名:Frontiers in zoology

    缩写:FRONT ZOOL

    ISSN:1742-9994

    e-ISSN:1742-9994

    IF/分区:2.6/Q1

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    Cranial morphology in flying squirrels: diet, shape, and size disparity across tropical and temperate biomes