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Testing a long-standing hypothesis on the relation between the auditory bulla size and environmental conditions: a case study in two jird species (Muridae: Meriones libycus and M. crassus)
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Citations
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References
2014
Year
PsychoacousticsEngineeringSocial SciencesAbstract VariationJird SpeciesWildlife EcologyBiogeographyMammalogyBiostatisticsEnvironmental ConditionsAuditory ScienceConservation BiologyAuditory ResearchAdaptive EnlargementBiologyBioacousticsEvolutionary BiologyZoogeographyAuditory Bulla SizeWildlife BiologyAnimal BehaviorSpatial Ecology
Abstract Variation in mammalian auditory bulla size has been linked to environmental conditions, and has even been claimed to provide a habitat-specific survival value. Enlarged bullae are typically shared among species adapted to living in arid habitats. Previous studies suggest that jirds also exhibit this adaptive enlargement of the bulla. However, such claims are based on the observation on a limited number of specimens, and thus they provide no quantitative support for this hypothesis. Therefore, we tested this hypothesis using a combination of geometric morphometrics and multivariate statistical techniques on a large sample of two jird species that exhibit a wide and partially overlapping geographical (and hence climatic) range, i.e.,
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