Dear MARMAM readers,

We are pleased to announce the publication (available via early view) of the 
following paper in Biological Journal of the Linnean Society:

"Comparative anatomy of the bony labyrinth of extant and extinct porpoises 
(Cetacea: Phocoenidae)"

Rachel A. Racicot, William Gearty, Naoki Kohno, John J. Flynn

doi: 10.1111/bij.12857

*Abstract*

The inner ear anatomy of cetaceans, now more readily accessible by means of 
nondestructive high-resolution X-ray computed tomographic (CT) scanning, 
provides a window into their acoustic abilities and ecological preferences. 
Inner ear labyrinths also may be a source for additional morphological 
characters for phylogenetic analyses. In this study, we explore digital 
endocasts of the inner ear labyrinths of representative species of extinct and 
extant porpoises (Mammalia: Cetacea: Phocoenidae), a clade of some of the 
smallest odontocete cetaceans, which produce some of the highest-frequency 
clicks for biosonar and communication. Metrics used to infer hearing ranges 
based on cochlear morphology indicate that all taxa considered could hear 
high-frequency sounds, thus the group had already acquired high-frequency 
hearing capabilities by the Miocene (9–11 Mya) at the latest. Vestibular 
morphology indicates that extant species with pelagic preferences have 
similarly low semicircular canal deviations from 90°, values indicating more 
sensitivity to head rotations. Species with near-shore preferences have higher 
canal deviation values, indicating less sensitivity to head rotations. 
Extending these analyses to the extinct species, we demonstrate a good match 
between those predicted to have coastal (such as Semirostrum cerutti) 
preferences and high canal deviation values. We establish new body length 
relationships based on correlations with inner ear labyrinth volume, which can 
be further explored among other aquatic mammals to infer body size of specimens 
consisting of fragmentary material.

Full text available at:
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/bij.12857/full

PDFs may be requested from rraci...@nhm.org, although email response may be 
slow due to field work.

Best wishes,
Rachel

--
Rachel Racicot, PhD
Postdoctoral Research Scientist
The Dinosaur Institute
Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County
Los Angeles, CA 90007
USA
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