The seasonal changes in brain size of some shrews represent the most drastic reversible transformation in the mammalian central nervous system known to date. Brain mass decreases 10-26% from summer to winter and regrows 9-16% in spring, but the underlying structural changes at the cellular level are not yet understood. Here, we describe the volumetric differences in brain structures between seasons and sexes of the common shrew (Sorex araneus) in detail, confirming that changes in different brain regions vary in the magnitude of change. Notably, shrews show a decrease in hypothalamus, thalamus, and hippocampal volume and later regrowth in spring, whereas neocortex and striatum volumes decrease in winter and do not recover in size. For some ...
Postnatal size changes in most vertebrates are unidirectional and finite once the individual reaches...
Global climate change affects many aspects of biology and has been shown to cause body size changes ...
The seasonal changes discovered by D e h n e l (1949) in the height of the skull of t h e common shr...
In a rare phenomenon, shrews and few other species cope with seasonal environments by reducing and r...
In a rare phenomenon, shrews and few other species cope with seasonal environments by reducing and r...
1. Some small mammals exhibit Dehnel's Phenomenon, a drastic decrease in body mass, braincase, and b...
The growth of the vertebrate skull and brain is usually unidirectional and more or less stops when a...
Ontogenetic changes in skull shape and size are ubiquitous in altricial vertebrates, but typically u...
Postnatal size changes in most vertebrates are unidirectional and finite once the individual reaches...
Postnatal size changes in most vertebrates are unidirectional and finite once the individual reaches...
Postnatal size changes in most vertebrates are unidirectional and finite once the individual reaches...
Postnatal size changes in most vertebrates are unidirectional and finite once the individual reaches...
Postnatal size changes in most vertebrates are unidirectional and finite once the individual reaches...
Postnatal size changes in most vertebrates are unidirectional and finite once the individual reaches...
Postnatal size changes in most vertebrates are unidirectional and finite once the individual reaches...
Postnatal size changes in most vertebrates are unidirectional and finite once the individual reaches...
Global climate change affects many aspects of biology and has been shown to cause body size changes ...
The seasonal changes discovered by D e h n e l (1949) in the height of the skull of t h e common shr...
In a rare phenomenon, shrews and few other species cope with seasonal environments by reducing and r...
In a rare phenomenon, shrews and few other species cope with seasonal environments by reducing and r...
1. Some small mammals exhibit Dehnel's Phenomenon, a drastic decrease in body mass, braincase, and b...
The growth of the vertebrate skull and brain is usually unidirectional and more or less stops when a...
Ontogenetic changes in skull shape and size are ubiquitous in altricial vertebrates, but typically u...
Postnatal size changes in most vertebrates are unidirectional and finite once the individual reaches...
Postnatal size changes in most vertebrates are unidirectional and finite once the individual reaches...
Postnatal size changes in most vertebrates are unidirectional and finite once the individual reaches...
Postnatal size changes in most vertebrates are unidirectional and finite once the individual reaches...
Postnatal size changes in most vertebrates are unidirectional and finite once the individual reaches...
Postnatal size changes in most vertebrates are unidirectional and finite once the individual reaches...
Postnatal size changes in most vertebrates are unidirectional and finite once the individual reaches...
Postnatal size changes in most vertebrates are unidirectional and finite once the individual reaches...
Global climate change affects many aspects of biology and has been shown to cause body size changes ...
The seasonal changes discovered by D e h n e l (1949) in the height of the skull of t h e common shr...