CYCLIC VARIATION IN SKULL–BODY REGRESSIONS OF LEMMINGS
- 1 July 1964
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Zoology
- Vol. 42 (4), 631-643
- https://doi.org/10.1139/z64-054
Abstract
A population cyclic of brown and varying lemmings in the central Canadian arctic was accompanied by cycle changes in the position of skull-body regressions. The regressions of log body weight and total length on condylobasal length, zygomatic breadth, and mastoid breadth showed highly significant changes in both slope and elevation, the shifts in elevation being more prominent. These changes appear in adult animals as well as in summer-born young. Whether these changes are phenotypic or genotypic is not known. They are not caused by seasonal changes in growth nor by changes in age structure of the population over the cycle. Nutritional effects cannot be ruled out but data available in the literature do not support a nutritional explanation. These changes could be genetic and involve a cyclic polymorphism.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Lemming Cycle at Baker Lake, Canada, during 1959-62Science, 1963
- Severe undernutrition in growing and adult animalsBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1961
- MULTIVARIATE GEOGRAPHICAL VARIATION IN THE WOLFCANIS LUPUSL.Evolution, 1959
- Size inheritance and growth in a mouse species cross (Mus musculus × Mus bactrianus). III. Inheritance of adult quantitative charactersJournal of Experimental Zoology, 1931