Background: In horses, the morphological changes induced by the process of domestication are reportedly less pronounced than in other species, such as dogs or pigs – although the horses’ disparity has rarely been empirically tested. We investigated shape differences and modularity of domesticated horses, Przewalski’s horses, donkeys and zebras. Mandibular and tooth shape have been shown to be valuable features for differentiating wild and domesticated forms in some mammals. Results: Both mandible and teeth, show a pattern of shape space occupation analogous to that of the cranium, with domesticated horses occupying a similar extension in shape space to that of wild equids. Only cranial shape data exhibit a tendency to separate domesticated...
TpsDig output for 2) upper third molar, 3) upper second premolar, 4) lower third molar, and 5) lower...
The skulls of 74 specimens of different species and domestic breeds of Ovis were analysed by means o...
TpsDig output for 2) upper third molar, 3) upper second premolar, 4) lower third molar, and 5) lower...
Abstract Background In horses, the morphological changes induced by the process of domestication are...
The potential of artificial selection to dramatically impact phenotypic diversity is well known. Lar...
International audienceDental morphological differences in the first two mandibular molars of domesti...
Archaeological and molecular data suggest that horses were domesticated comparatively recently, the ...
Archaeological and molecular data suggest that horses were domesticated comparatively recently, the ...
Table S1. List of cranial landmarks and their placement within the module configurations tested in t...
Organisms are organized into suites of anatomical structures that typically covary when developmenta...
Table S3. Module disparity and integration values calculated separately for domesticated and wild ho...
Organisms are organized into suites of anatomical structures that typically covary when developmenta...
Organisms are organized into suites of anatomical structures that typically covary when developmenta...
International audienceThe Plio–Pleistocene evolution of Equus and the subsequent domestication of ho...
Wild canid populations exhibit different anatomical morphologies compared to domesticated dogs in No...
TpsDig output for 2) upper third molar, 3) upper second premolar, 4) lower third molar, and 5) lower...
The skulls of 74 specimens of different species and domestic breeds of Ovis were analysed by means o...
TpsDig output for 2) upper third molar, 3) upper second premolar, 4) lower third molar, and 5) lower...
Abstract Background In horses, the morphological changes induced by the process of domestication are...
The potential of artificial selection to dramatically impact phenotypic diversity is well known. Lar...
International audienceDental morphological differences in the first two mandibular molars of domesti...
Archaeological and molecular data suggest that horses were domesticated comparatively recently, the ...
Archaeological and molecular data suggest that horses were domesticated comparatively recently, the ...
Table S1. List of cranial landmarks and their placement within the module configurations tested in t...
Organisms are organized into suites of anatomical structures that typically covary when developmenta...
Table S3. Module disparity and integration values calculated separately for domesticated and wild ho...
Organisms are organized into suites of anatomical structures that typically covary when developmenta...
Organisms are organized into suites of anatomical structures that typically covary when developmenta...
International audienceThe Plio–Pleistocene evolution of Equus and the subsequent domestication of ho...
Wild canid populations exhibit different anatomical morphologies compared to domesticated dogs in No...
TpsDig output for 2) upper third molar, 3) upper second premolar, 4) lower third molar, and 5) lower...
The skulls of 74 specimens of different species and domestic breeds of Ovis were analysed by means o...
TpsDig output for 2) upper third molar, 3) upper second premolar, 4) lower third molar, and 5) lower...