Body size and cranial shape differentiation in urban and rural house mice ( Mus musculus domesticus )

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Abstract

Cities are characterized by elevated temperatures, increased pollution, and high-density human populations which often are accompanied by changes in available resources, like food. These shifts have the potential to drive phenotypic divergence in urban wildlife. Functional morphological traits, like body size, can mediate interactions between wildlife and habitat and are closely tied to life history and fitness. While examples of functional morphological variation associated with urbanization are increasing, variation in such traits as a response to urbanization remains unexplored for most taxa. Here, we investigated morphological divergence between urban and rural populations of house mice ( Mus musculus domesticus ). House mice are globally distributed in diverse habitats and are a model system with a wealth of phenotypic data, making them useful for the study of the impacts of urbanization on morphology. Using a paired replicate design, we sampled urban and rural populations in three distinct metropolitan regions in the eastern United States. We found that body size was smaller in urban populations. Using 3D geometric morphometrics, we also analyzed variation in cranial shape across habitats. Differences in cranial shape were largely allometric, that is, driven by differences in body size. However, we also uncovered evidence of cranial shape variation between habitats not explained by size. In contrast, we did not find evidence for habitat-driven differences in cranial capacity independent of size. Overall, our results suggest a key role for body size in mediating morphological responses to urbanization and highlight the potential of house mice as a globally-distributed model for urbanization.

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