Larger herbivores can act as keystone species which strongly influence their communities. During the Pliocene and Pleistocene, Australia was dominated by a number of large to gigantic marsupial herbivore taxa. Many of these have been understudied quantitatively with regards to their ecology; and identifying the diet of these species will improve our understanding of not only their ecologies, but also of past environments. Recent research has found that cranial morphology among kangaroos and wallabies corresponds with foraging behaviours and mechanical properties of preferred plant tissues. Here we apply shape analysis and computational biomechanics to test two hypotheses: that feeding ecology is associated with craniofacial morphology acros...
Diprotodontids, a group of large-bodied wombat-like marsupial herbivores, were broadly distributed i...
Kangaroos are the world's most diverse group of herbivorous marsupials. Following late-Miocene inten...
Differentiating between ancient and younger, more rapidly evolved clades is important for determinin...
Larger herbivores can act as keystone species which strongly influence their communities. During the...
Larger herbivores can act as keystone species which strongly influence their communities. During the...
Larger herbivores can act as keystone species which strongly influence their communities. During the...
Larger herbivores can act as keystone species which strongly influence their communities. During the...
Increasing body size is accompanied by facial elongation across a number of mammalian taxa. This tre...
Increasing body size is accompanied by facial elongation across a number of mammalian taxa. This tre...
Increasing body size is accompanied by facial elongation across a number of mammalian taxa. This tre...
Increasing body size is accompanied by facial elongation across a number of mammalian taxa. This tre...
Marsupial herbivores exhibit a wide variety of skull shapes and sizes to exploit different ecologica...
Understanding feeding ecology of extinct kangaroos is fundamental to understanding the evolution of ...
Interspecific variation in the craniofacial morphology of kangaroos and wallabies is associated with...
Kangaroos are the world's most diverse group of herbivorous marsupials. Following late-Miocene inten...
Diprotodontids, a group of large-bodied wombat-like marsupial herbivores, were broadly distributed i...
Kangaroos are the world's most diverse group of herbivorous marsupials. Following late-Miocene inten...
Differentiating between ancient and younger, more rapidly evolved clades is important for determinin...
Larger herbivores can act as keystone species which strongly influence their communities. During the...
Larger herbivores can act as keystone species which strongly influence their communities. During the...
Larger herbivores can act as keystone species which strongly influence their communities. During the...
Larger herbivores can act as keystone species which strongly influence their communities. During the...
Increasing body size is accompanied by facial elongation across a number of mammalian taxa. This tre...
Increasing body size is accompanied by facial elongation across a number of mammalian taxa. This tre...
Increasing body size is accompanied by facial elongation across a number of mammalian taxa. This tre...
Increasing body size is accompanied by facial elongation across a number of mammalian taxa. This tre...
Marsupial herbivores exhibit a wide variety of skull shapes and sizes to exploit different ecologica...
Understanding feeding ecology of extinct kangaroos is fundamental to understanding the evolution of ...
Interspecific variation in the craniofacial morphology of kangaroos and wallabies is associated with...
Kangaroos are the world's most diverse group of herbivorous marsupials. Following late-Miocene inten...
Diprotodontids, a group of large-bodied wombat-like marsupial herbivores, were broadly distributed i...
Kangaroos are the world's most diverse group of herbivorous marsupials. Following late-Miocene inten...
Differentiating between ancient and younger, more rapidly evolved clades is important for determinin...