Nocturnality is widespread among extant mammals and often considered the ancestral behavioural pattern for all mammals. However, mammals are nested within a larger clade, Synapsida, and non-mammalian synapsids comprise a rich phylogenetic, morphological and ecological diversity. Even though non-mammalian synapsids potentially could elucidate the early evolution of diel activity patterns and enrich the understanding of synapsid palaeobiology, data on their diel activity are currently unavailable. Using scleral ring and orbit dimensions, we demonstrate that nocturnal activity was not an innovation unique to mammals but a character that appeared much earlier in synapsid history, possibly several times independently. The 24 Carboniferous to Jur...
In this chapter, we review the evidence for how ecological factors, including predation risk and for...
Previous studies of cranial shape have established a consistent interspecific allometric pattern rel...
Diel activity pattern (DAP) is a key aspect of an animal\u27s ecology, but it is difficult to infer ...
Nocturnality is widespread among extant mammals and often considered the ancestral behavioural patte...
ABSTRACT—Synapsids include modern mammals and their fossil ancestors, the non-mammalian synapsids, o...
Most modern mammals, including strictly diurnal species, exhibit sensory adaptations to nocturnal ac...
Many animals are active only during a particular time (e.g. day vs. night), a partitioning that may ...
Variation in daily activity patterns facilitates temporal partitioning of habitat and resources amon...
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...
Basal synapsids (‘pelycosaurs’) form the basalmost portion of the mammalian stem lineage and documen...
The core design of spiking neurones is remarkably similar throughout the animal kingdom. Their basic...
[eng] Mammals evolved from small-sized reptiles that developed endothermic metabolism. This allowed ...
Mammals are the only surviving group of Cynodontia, a synapsid clade that first appears in the fossi...
Background: Based on evolutionary patterns of the vertebrate eye, Walls (1942) hypothesized that ear...
In this chapter, we review the evidence for how ecological factors, including predation risk and for...
Previous studies of cranial shape have established a consistent interspecific allometric pattern rel...
Diel activity pattern (DAP) is a key aspect of an animal\u27s ecology, but it is difficult to infer ...
Nocturnality is widespread among extant mammals and often considered the ancestral behavioural patte...
ABSTRACT—Synapsids include modern mammals and their fossil ancestors, the non-mammalian synapsids, o...
Most modern mammals, including strictly diurnal species, exhibit sensory adaptations to nocturnal ac...
Many animals are active only during a particular time (e.g. day vs. night), a partitioning that may ...
Variation in daily activity patterns facilitates temporal partitioning of habitat and resources amon...
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...
Basal synapsids (‘pelycosaurs’) form the basalmost portion of the mammalian stem lineage and documen...
The core design of spiking neurones is remarkably similar throughout the animal kingdom. Their basic...
[eng] Mammals evolved from small-sized reptiles that developed endothermic metabolism. This allowed ...
Mammals are the only surviving group of Cynodontia, a synapsid clade that first appears in the fossi...
Background: Based on evolutionary patterns of the vertebrate eye, Walls (1942) hypothesized that ear...
In this chapter, we review the evidence for how ecological factors, including predation risk and for...
Previous studies of cranial shape have established a consistent interspecific allometric pattern rel...
Diel activity pattern (DAP) is a key aspect of an animal\u27s ecology, but it is difficult to infer ...