Numerous studies investigate morphology in the context of habitat, and lizards have received particular attention. Substrate usage is often reflected in the morphology of characters associated with locomotion, and, as a result, claws have become well‐studied ecomorphological traits linking the two. The Kimberley predator guild of Western Australia consists of 10 sympatric varanid species. The purpose of this study was to quantify claw size and shape in the guild using geometric morphometrics, and determine whether these features correlated with substrate use and habitat. Each species was assigned a Habitat/substrate group based on the substrate their claws interact with in their respective habitat. Claw morphometrics were derived for both w...
This paper considers the effects of claw morphology on the gripping efficiency of arboreal (Varanus ...
Ecomorphology is the study of correlations between morphology and habitat(s) in organisms. If morpho...
The performance of an organism in its environment frequently depends more on its composite phenotype...
Numerous studies investigate morphology in the context of habitat, and lizards have received particu...
Numerous studies investigate morphology in the context of habitat, and lizards have received particu...
Numerous studies investigate morphology in the context of habitat, and lizards have received particu...
As a group, lizards occupy a vast array of habitats worldwide, yet there remain relatively few cases...
Traditionally, it has been suggested that variation in locomotor mode should be correlated with vari...
1. We examined intra- and interspecific variation in functional morphology and whole-organism perfor...
Species occupying similar selective environments often share similar phenotypes as the result of nat...
The central tenet of ecomorphological theory holds that different ecological requirements lead to di...
Sympatric species that initially overlap in resource use are expected to partition the environment i...
We explored the ontogenetic dynamics of the morphological and allometric disparity in the cranium sh...
In our earlier analysis of Varanus body shape, size was a dominating factor with some qualitative ph...
Many important aspects of an organism’s life are closely related to its body size. As a consequence,...
This paper considers the effects of claw morphology on the gripping efficiency of arboreal (Varanus ...
Ecomorphology is the study of correlations between morphology and habitat(s) in organisms. If morpho...
The performance of an organism in its environment frequently depends more on its composite phenotype...
Numerous studies investigate morphology in the context of habitat, and lizards have received particu...
Numerous studies investigate morphology in the context of habitat, and lizards have received particu...
Numerous studies investigate morphology in the context of habitat, and lizards have received particu...
As a group, lizards occupy a vast array of habitats worldwide, yet there remain relatively few cases...
Traditionally, it has been suggested that variation in locomotor mode should be correlated with vari...
1. We examined intra- and interspecific variation in functional morphology and whole-organism perfor...
Species occupying similar selective environments often share similar phenotypes as the result of nat...
The central tenet of ecomorphological theory holds that different ecological requirements lead to di...
Sympatric species that initially overlap in resource use are expected to partition the environment i...
We explored the ontogenetic dynamics of the morphological and allometric disparity in the cranium sh...
In our earlier analysis of Varanus body shape, size was a dominating factor with some qualitative ph...
Many important aspects of an organism’s life are closely related to its body size. As a consequence,...
This paper considers the effects of claw morphology on the gripping efficiency of arboreal (Varanus ...
Ecomorphology is the study of correlations between morphology and habitat(s) in organisms. If morpho...
The performance of an organism in its environment frequently depends more on its composite phenotype...