Data from: A Miopetaurista (Sciuridae, Rodentia) cranium from the middle Miocene of Bavaria (Germany) and brain evolution in flying squirrels
Flying squirrels (Sciurinae, Pteromyini) are the most successful group of gliding mammals. However, their fossil record mostly consists of isolated dental remains which provide very limited insights into their paleobiology and evolution. Only recently, the first skeleton of a fossil flying squirrel,...
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Zusammenfassung: | Flying squirrels (Sciurinae, Pteromyini) are the most successful group of
gliding mammals. However, their fossil record mostly consists of isolated
dental remains which provide very limited insights into their paleobiology
and evolution. Only recently, the first skeleton of a fossil flying
squirrel, belonging to the species Miopetaurista neogrivensis, has been
described. It presents all the diagnostic gliding-related postcranial
features of its extant relatives and shows that this group has undergone
very little morphological change for almost 12 million years. However, the
associated cranium is badly crushed, so particular details of the cranial
morphology cannot be described. Here we describe a well-preserved cranium
of the closely-related Miopetaurista crusafonti from 12.5–12.0 Ma from
Bavaria (Germany). Its cranial morphology is found to be almost identical
to extant large flying squirrels, even in details such as the position of
the foramina. The virtual endocast also shows close affinities to living
large flying squirrels in morphology and in the relative volume of
different brain regions, showing diagnostic features such as the size
reduction of petrosal lobules and olfactory bulbs. However, the
encephalization quotient (EQ) and neocortical ratio are lower than
observed in extant flying squirrels. EQ is known to increase through time
in squirrels, but might also be related to locomotion, as arboreal and
gliding squirrels display higher EQs than terrestrial ones. Because
Miopetaurista was certainly a glider, its comparatively lower EQ and
neocortical size support the existence of an independent trend of
increasing EQ and neocortical complexity in this flying squirrel subclade. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.5qfttdz4p |