Inner ear morphology in wild versus laboratory house mice
Sabrina Renaud (LBBE), L\'ea Amar (LBBE), Pascale Chevret (LBBE),, Caroline Romestaing (LEHNA), Jean-Pierre Qu\'er\'e (UMR CBGP), Corinne, R\'egis (LBBE), Renaud Lebrun (UMR ISEM)

TL;DR
This study compares the inner ear morphology of wild and laboratory mice, revealing how captivity and reduced mobility influence ear structure diversity and evolution, with implications for understanding morphological plasticity and drift.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed geometric morphometric comparison of inner ear morphology across wild, laboratory, and hybrid mice, highlighting effects of captivity and mobility reduction.
Findings
Wild mice share similar inner ear morphology.
Laboratory mice show significant divergence and increased variation.
Lab-bred wild mice exhibit morphological plasticity influenced by maternal behavior.
Abstract
The semicircular canals of the inner ear are involved in balance and velocity control. Being crucial to ensure efficient mobility, their morphology exhibits an evolutionary conservatism attributed to stabilizing selection. Release of selection in slow-moving animals has been argued to lead to morphological divergence and increased inter-individual variation. In its natural habitat, the house mouse Mus musculus moves in a tridimensional space where efficient balance is required. In contrast, laboratory mice in standard cages are severely restricted in their ability to move, which possibly reduces selection on the inner ear morphology. This effect was tested by comparing four groups of mice: several populations of wild mice trapped in commensal habitats in France; their second-generation laboratory offspring, to assess plastic effects related to breeding conditions; a standard laboratory…
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Taxonomy
MethodsSparse Evolutionary Training
