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Supplementary material from "Morphological change in an isolated population of red squirrels (Sciurus vulgaris) in Britain"

Posted on 2025-01-09 - 10:17
The mechanical properties of dietary items are known to influence skull morphology, either via evolution or by phenotypic plasticity. Here, we investigated the impact of supplementary feeding of peanuts on the morphology of red squirrels (Sciurus vulgaris) from five populations in Britain (North Scotland, Borders, Jersey and two temporally distinct populations from Formby [Merseyside]). Stable isotope analysis confirmed dietary ecology in 58 specimens. Geometric morphometrics were used to analyse 3D and 2D shape variation across 113 crania and 388 mandibles respectively. Nitrogen isotope ratios (δ15N) were lower in the 1990s and 2010s Formby squirrels (suggesting a diet with an increased proportion of peanuts), and higher in other populations. Significant differences in cranio-mandibular shape were found between all populations, with 1990s Formby red squirrels exhibiting a morphology associated with reduced masticatory efficiency. This effect was partially reversed following a reduction in supplementary feeding of peanuts. We propose that these morphological changes are related to the reduced mechanical effort needed to process peanuts relative to naturally occurring food items. This could be an example of diet-induced plastic changes to the skeleton in non-muroid wild mammals, although further research is needed to exclude other driving factors such as genetics.

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AUTHORS (8)

Kim Chandler
Eloy Gálvez-López
Stuart Black
Andrew Kitchener
Kat Hamill
Bethan Roberts
Sean Doherty
Philip Graham Cox
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