4.3 Article

Evolution of arboreality and fossoriality in squirrels and aplodontid rodents: Insights from the semicircular canals of fossil rodents

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANATOMY
Volume 238, Issue 1, Pages 96-112

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/joa.13296

Keywords

adaptation; agility; inner ear; Ischyromidae; locomotion; Sciuroidea

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. H2020 Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions [792611]
  3. Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [792611] Funding Source: Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)

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The size of the semicircular canals in the inner ear is related to body mass and agility of locomotion in animals. Additionally, the orthogonality of the semicircular canals is associated with angular head velocity. Reconstructing locomotor agility in fossil rodents can be done using radius of curvature dimensions and SCC orthogonality metrics.
Reconstructing locomotor behaviour for fossil animals is typically done with postcranial elements. However, for species only known from cranial material, locomotor behaviour is difficult to reconstruct. The semicircular canals (SCCs) in the inner ear provide insight into an animal's locomotor agility. A relationship exists between the size of the SCCs relative to body mass and the jerkiness of an animal's locomotion. Additionally, studies have also demonstrated a relationship between SCC orthogonality and angular head velocity. Here, we employ two metrics for reconstructing locomotor agility, radius of curvature dimensions and SCC orthogonality, in a sample of twelve fossil rodents from the families Ischyromyidae, Sciuridae and Aplodontidae. The method utilizing radius of curvature dimensions provided a reconstruction of fossil rodent locomotor behaviour that is more consistent with previous studies assessing fossil rodent locomotor behaviour compared to the method based on SCC orthogonality. Previous work on ischyromyids suggests that this group displayed a variety of locomotor modes. Members of Paramyinae and Ischyromyinae have relatively smaller SCCs and are reconstructed to be relatively slower compared to members of Reithroparamyinae. Early members of the Sciuroidea clade including the sciuridCedromus wilsoniand the aplodontidProsciurus relictusare reconstructed to be more agile than ischyromyids, in the range of extant arboreal squirrels. This reconstruction supports previous inferences that arboreality was likely an ancestral trait for this group. Derived members of Sciuridae and Aplodontidae vary in agility scores. The fossil squirrelProtosciuruscf.rachelaeis inferred from postcranial material as arboreal, which is in agreement with its high agility, in the range of extant arboreal squirrels. In contrast, the fossil aplodontidMesogaulus paniensishas a relatively low agility score, similar to the fossorialAplodontia rufa, the only living aplodontid rodent. This result is in agreement with its postcranial reconstruction as fossorial and with previous indications that early aplodontids were more arboreal than their burrowing descendants.

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