All Stories

  1. Skull variation in populations of the Indian gerbil Tatera across its geographic range
  2. Environmental correlates of body size influence range size and extinction risk
  3. Cranial differences in three-toed jerboas (Dipodinae) according to recent taxonomic revisions
  4. Morphological variation in the crania of the Cape Short-eared gerbil, Desmodillus, across geography
  5. Phylogenetics and the evolution of terrestriality in mudskippers (Gobiidae: Oxudercinae)
  6. Mitochondrial Sequence Variation, Haplotype Diversity, and Relationships Among Dromedary Camel-Types
  7. FGF5 missense mutation is associated with dromedary hair length variation
  8. Desmodilliscus braueri crania compared to Pachyuromys duprasi (Desmodilliscini)
  9. A morphometric comparison of the cranial shapes of Asian dwarf hamsters (Phodopus)
  10. Geometric morphometrics vs. linear morphometrics in camels
  11. Phylogeny, convergence, and allometry partly explain cranial differences in allactagine jerboas
  12. Differences between Australian hopping mice crania is explained by phylogeny and ecology
  13. The geometric pattern of variation in the mandibles of the the Dwarf Gerbil Gerbillus nanus
  14. The applicability of Allen’s rule in rodents
  15. Comparison of genetic diversity among different camel-types.
  16. Geometric morphometrics can be used to differentiate between broad camel types
  17. Rodent body size is not associated with habitat productivity
  18. Climate data estimated from IUCN range maps are highly consistent to those from GBIF occurrence data
  19. A systematic method of collecting camel DNA samples and associated phenotypic information
  20. Comparison of camel DNA sampled from whole-blood, saliva, and tail-hair
  21. An iOS and Android App for collecting biological specimen data (SamplEase)
  22. Dwarf gerbils Gerbillus nanus show now biologically meaningful geographic variation in cranial shape
  23. Differences in skull morphology among rodent species are associated with climate
  24. Global desert rodent assemblages do not show phylogenetic nor morphological community structure
  25. Speciation/diversity is not associated with cranial disparity/evolution rate (in muroid rodents)
  26. Speciation is not associated with diet, habitat, body size, nor tail length (in muroid rodents)
  27. Skull variation across Gerbillus and Dipodillus species (gerbils)
  28. The relationship between diet and dental morphology in rats and mice
  29. More environmentally productive regions have larger rodent species
  30. Gerbil species living in more open habitats have longer hind feet (for leaping)
  31. The high diversity of muroid rodents is not explained by its colonization of new continents
  32. Phylogeny of gerbils & relatives and the association between auditory bulla size and aridity