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1 June 2009 Mandible Morphometrics, Dental Microwear Pattern, and Paleobiology of the Extinct Balearic Dormouse Hypnomys morpheus
Lionel Hautier, Pere Bover, Josep Antoni Alcover, Jacques Michaux
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Hypnomys morpheus is a giant endemic dormouse from the Pleistocene deposits of Mallorca and Menorca (Balearic Islands, Spain). The present paper aims to interpret the morphological divergence between the mandibles of Hypnomys and of its extant relative Eliomys, the outline of the mandible being used as a marker of the morphological divergence. By comparison with the mandible of Eliomys, the more massive mandible of Hypnomys has recorded an ecological shift of the insular lineage towards a more abrasive diet, including hard vegetable matter, and a different niche. A microwear analysis of the teeth of Hypnomys was simultaneously performed as it can shed light on the diet, and is independent from the comparison of the mandibles. Hypnomys possibly ate harder food items than Eliomys, and likely occupied most of the island environments. Hypnomys appears to have differentiated from its ancestral type toward a more generalized morphology because of the lack of competitors.

Lionel Hautier, Pere Bover, Josep Antoni Alcover, and Jacques Michaux "Mandible Morphometrics, Dental Microwear Pattern, and Paleobiology of the Extinct Balearic Dormouse Hypnomys morpheus," Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 54(2), 181-194, (1 June 2009). https://doi.org/10.4202/app.2008.0001
Published: 1 June 2009
KEYWORDS
Balearic Islands
Fourier analysis
Gliridae
Hypnomys morpheus
Mammalia
microwear
Morphological evolution
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