2024
DOI: 10.1111/jzo.13244
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Dietary and habitat use (non)specializations contribute to shaping the craniomandibular variation and developmental instability in a rodent community

J. J. Martínez,
V. Millien,
J. A. Coda
et al.

Abstract: The evolution and ecomorphology of rodent craniomandibular apparatus have been extensively studied at a broad spatial scale. However, the question of how phenotypes and developmental instability interact with ecological pressures in human‐modified landscapes has been less explored. In this study, we test the influence of evolutionary history, diet, and habitat use on skull and mandible shape variation within a rodent community composed of eight cricetid species from an agroecosystem in central Argentina. We us… Show more

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