Searching for indicators of age, sex and population in european mouflon mandibles
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/98991Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor
Azorit, Concepción; Jiménez Tenorio, Manuel; Casinos, Adrià; López Montoya, Antonio Jesús; López-Fuster, María José; Rocha Barbosa, OscarEditorial
Associazione Teriologica Italiana
Materia
Environmental constraints in Mediterranean ecosystems Geometric morphometrics Mandibles Mouflon Growth modeling Von Bertalanffy model
Date
2020Referencia bibliográfica
Azorit, C., Jimenez Tenorio, M., Casinos, A., Lopez Montoya, A. J., Lopez-Fuster, M. J., & Rocha Barbosa, O. (2020). Searching for indicators of age, sex and population in European mouflon mandibles. Hystrix, the Italian Journal of Mammalogy. 31(1): 48-57.
Abstract
Mandibles from separate populations of free-living mouflons (Ovis aries musimon) from Southern
Spain, submitted to different ecological conditions, were studied. Searching for ontogenetic shape
variations we used geometric morphometrics tools and we explored the use of several mathematical
models for describing growth rate variations between populations and sexes. A strong allometry
was detected with variations in shape mainly matching with molar and premolar eruption. Mandible
shape did not vary significantly with sex nor was sexual size dimorphism detected in adults,
whatever the population. By modeling growth we detected differences between populations in all
parameters such as the maturity rate describing precocity, and the time it took to reach asymptotic
size (varying from 9 up to 18 months). A longer period of growth did not result in a larger asymptotic
size, but it led to smaller mandibles. Mouflons with relatively late teeth replacement, lower
maturation rate and smaller adult size were those of the population submitted to extreme environmental
conditions, like epizootic disease, droughts and ungulate overpopulations. We discuss how
a delay in reaching mature size has probably an important subsequent impact on reproductive and
life-history traits in this species. Being able to record the effects of density-dependent and densityindependent
factors, mandibles become a target of interest for ecological and management studies
also on mouflons.