Fifty years of data show the effects of climate on overall skull size
and the extent of seasonal reversible skull size changes in the common
shrew
Abstract
1. Global climate change affects many aspects of biology and has been
shown to cause body size changes in animals. However, suitable datasets
allowing the analysis of long-term relationships between body size and
climate are rare. 2. The size of the skull, often used as a proxy for
body size, does not change much in fully grown vertebrates, but some
soricine shrews shrink their skull and brain in winter and regrow it in
spring. This is thought to be a winter adaptation in these
high-metabolic, nonhibernating animals, as a smaller brain size reduces
energy requirements. 3. Climate could thus affect not only the overall
size but also the pattern of the size change, i.e., Dehnel’s Phenomenon,
in these shrews. 4. We assessed the impact of the changes in climate on
the overall skull size and the different stages of Dehnel’s phenomenon
in skulls of the common shrew, Sorex araneus, collected over 50 years in
the Białowieża Forest, NE Poland. 5. Overall skull size decreased, along
with increasingly mild winters and decreasing soil moisture, which
determined the availability of the shrews’ main food source, earthworms.
The magnitude of Dehnel’s phenomenon increased over time, indicating an
increasing selection pressure on animals in winter. Overall, climate
clearly affected the common shrew’s overall size as well as its seasonal
size changes. With the current acceleration in climate change, the
effects on the distribution range of this cold-adapted species may be
quite severe.