Publication: No news from old drawings? Stomach anatomy in muroid rodents in relation to body size and ecology
No news from old drawings? Stomach anatomy in muroid rodents in relation to body size and ecology
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Steiner, N., Clauss, M., Martin, L. F., Imper, C., Meloro, C., & Duque-Correa, M. J. (2022). No news from old drawings? Stomach anatomy in muroid rodents in relation to body size and ecology. Journal of Morphology, 283(9), 1200–1209. https://doi.org/10.1002/jmor.21496
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Muroid rodents mostly have a complex stomach: one part is lined with a cornified (nonglandular) epithelium, referred to as a “forestomach”, whereas the rest is lined with glandular epithelium. Numerous functions for the forestomach have been proposed. We collated a catalog of anatomical depictions of the stomach of 174 muroid species from which the respective nonglandular and glandular areas could be digitally measured, yielding a “stomach ratio” (nonglandular:glandular area) as a scale‐independent variable. Stomach ratios ranged from
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Steiner, N., Clauss, M., Martin, L. F., Imper, C., Meloro, C., & Duque-Correa, M. J. (2022). No news from old drawings? Stomach anatomy in muroid rodents in relation to body size and ecology. Journal of Morphology, 283(9), 1200–1209. https://doi.org/10.1002/jmor.21496