Most modern mammals, including strictly diurnal species, exhibit sensory adaptations to nocturnal activity that are thought to be the result of a prolonged nocturnal phase or ‘bottleneck’ during early mammalian evolution. Nocturnality may have allowed mammals to avoid antagonistic interactions with diurnal dinosaurs during the Mesozoic. However, understanding the evolution of mammalian activity patterns is hindered by scant and ambiguous fossil evidence. While ancestral reconstructions of behavioural traits from extant species have the potential to elucidate these patterns, existing studies have been limited in taxonomic scope. Here, we use an extensive behavioural dataset for 2,415 species from all extant orders to reconstruct ancestral ac...
Many animals have strict diel activity patterns, with unique adaptations for either diurnal or noctu...
The amount of time asleep varies greatly in mammals, from 3 h in the donkey to 20 h in the armadillo...
Time is considered a resource in limited supply, and temporal niche separation is one of the most co...
In 1942, Walls described the concept of a 'nocturnal bottleneck' in placental mammals, where these s...
Mammals evolved from small-sized reptiles that developed endothermic metabolism. This allowed fillin...
Activity patterns have profound implications on primates’ morphology, physiology, and behavior and h...
[eng] Mammals evolved from small-sized reptiles that developed endothermic metabolism. This allowed ...
Nocturnality is widespread among extant mammals and often considered the ancestral behavioural patte...
Variation in daily activity patterns facilitates temporal partitioning of habitat and resources amon...
Background: Based on evolutionary patterns of the vertebrate eye, Walls (1942) hypothesized that ear...
Many animals are active only during a particular time (e.g. day vs. night), a partitioning that may ...
Copyright © 2013 National Academy of SciencesMany animals regulate their activity over a 24-h sleep–...
Most mammals can be characterized as nocturnal or diurnal. However infrequently, species may overcom...
notes: PMCID: PMC4183310types: Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tCopyright © 2014 Nat...
Many animals have strict diel activity patterns, with unique adaptations for either diurnal or noctu...
The amount of time asleep varies greatly in mammals, from 3 h in the donkey to 20 h in the armadillo...
Time is considered a resource in limited supply, and temporal niche separation is one of the most co...
In 1942, Walls described the concept of a 'nocturnal bottleneck' in placental mammals, where these s...
Mammals evolved from small-sized reptiles that developed endothermic metabolism. This allowed fillin...
Activity patterns have profound implications on primates’ morphology, physiology, and behavior and h...
[eng] Mammals evolved from small-sized reptiles that developed endothermic metabolism. This allowed ...
Nocturnality is widespread among extant mammals and often considered the ancestral behavioural patte...
Variation in daily activity patterns facilitates temporal partitioning of habitat and resources amon...
Background: Based on evolutionary patterns of the vertebrate eye, Walls (1942) hypothesized that ear...
Many animals are active only during a particular time (e.g. day vs. night), a partitioning that may ...
Copyright © 2013 National Academy of SciencesMany animals regulate their activity over a 24-h sleep–...
Most mammals can be characterized as nocturnal or diurnal. However infrequently, species may overcom...
notes: PMCID: PMC4183310types: Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tCopyright © 2014 Nat...
Many animals have strict diel activity patterns, with unique adaptations for either diurnal or noctu...
The amount of time asleep varies greatly in mammals, from 3 h in the donkey to 20 h in the armadillo...
Time is considered a resource in limited supply, and temporal niche separation is one of the most co...