Bryan McLean
@sousliks.bsky.social
27 followers 7 following 13 posts
Integrative biologist exploring mammal evolution | On a mission to liberate traits | Explore UNCG Mammals on GBIF: https://doi.org/10.15468/nujf6d
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Reposted by Bryan McLean
New open access NHM available ahead of print! "Seasonal Body Size Plasticity and the Generality of Dehnel’s Phenomenon in Sorex Shrews" by McLean et al. Read now! www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/...
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We also showed that this is a general phenomenon in Sorex shrews. Based on just the climate at our North Carolina site, we were able to predict the magnitude of shrinkage that we observed in the field.
Here is a cool image of the braincase shrinkage between Spring and subsequent Winter💀
Winter decreases in body mass, braincase height, and femur length were 13%, 11.5%, and 8.7%. Each rebounds the following spring in second-year individuals.
But, the phenomenon has been studied only sporadically in North American shrews. So, we studied the masked shrew (Sorex cinereus) in the Southern Appalachian Mountains of North Carolina for two years. This species weighs 2-5 grams and is active all winter.
Called “Dehnel’s Phenomenon”, this was first observed by the naturalist August Dehnel in 1949.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/August_...
August Dehnel - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Mammals make it through the tough times in different ways. Some hibernate, some use torpor (short bouts of inactivity), and some even migrate to new areas. Red-toothed shrews do something totally different – they shrink their bodies to reduce total energy demand.🤔
Ahhhhhh Spring. A time to replenish, revive, and…. REGROW YOUR BONES?!?

a🧵on a new paper