Allometry and adaptation in the long bones of a digging group of rodents (Ctenomyinae) |
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Authors: | A. CASINOS F.L.S. C. QUINTANA C. VILADIU |
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Affiliation: | Departament de Biologia Animal (Vertebrats), Universitat de Barcelona, 08028 Barcelona (Spain);*Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Departamento de Biologia, GIBE, Ciudad Universitaria Núñez, Pabellón II, 4°piso, 1428 Buenos Aires (Argentina) |
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Abstract: | Previous studies of rodent appendicular morphology suggest that digging activity induces changes in long bones, producing shorter and thicker structures. Subsequent hypotheses have been tested in Ctenomyinae, a group of octodontid rodents globally adapted to subterranean life. Slopes of the equations calculated for extant animals and their corresponding confidence intervals agree with expectations in almost all cases. Results on fossil taxa are less clear, but suggest a morphocline from a plesiomorphic condition of the appendicular skeleton, present in the fossil genera, departing little from that of the current epigeous rodents, to a more derived long bone design in the species of the living genus Ctenomys , in accordance with their digging activity. |
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Keywords: | Mammalia Rodentia fossil morphametrics |
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