Ça bosse fort dans la core team @spip ⚠️

Retour en 3 points sur des corrections de failles de sécurités 🌐 Pensez à mettre à jour vos sites !!!

• Mise à jour de sécurité : sortie de SPIP 4.4.10 (26/02)
• Mise à jour de sécurité : sortie de SPIP 4.4.9 (18/02)
• Mise à jour de sécurité : sortie de SPIP 4.4.8 (12/02)

➡️ https://blog.spip.net/

#SPIP #teamSquirrel #care

SPIP Blog - Du logiciel libre et de la tendresse

SPIP Blog

I definitely like your resident squirrel more than I'd ever like you - me, to almost every person who complains about squirrels, while squatting on prime squirrels habitat.

Pretty sure our native #squirrels are into some #landback action too.

#TeamSquirrel

Anybody interested in joining #TeamSquirrel? RT @FTAlphaville: We are hosting a New York pub quiz and drinks! http://on.ft.com/1y4wt7y

We are hosting a New York pub ...
2 of 5 seats on #TeamSquirrel now filled RT @steveomalley: @georgepearkes @FTAlphaville #yee

Many people say the world is divided into Cat people or Dog people. That's probably true.

I think the world is also divided into Bird people & Squirrel people. Neither is better or worse, but I'm firmly in #TeamDog & #TeamSquirrel

🙂

Just checking in on you, friend. Did you know that squirrels are nature's perfect animal? #TeamSquirrel
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/06W4sl9Fezw
She said the squirrel and then the squirrel fed her #Shorts

YouTube
@loren they are beautiful but I am #TeamSquirrel

Excited to release paper #2 by #TeamSquirrel as a preprint! Co-led by undergrads Hannah Rickman & Abby Burtner, we examined how locomotor mode & allometry affected the external shape and internal structure of squirrel humeri & femora w/
@ssantana

https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.02.08.527723v1

Finally, this is the first published paper by undergrads Tate Linden, Abby Burtner, Johannah Rickman, & Annika McFeely! Stay tuned for more #TeamSquirrel content 9/fin
The first #TeamSquirrel paper is published! Led by Tate Linden, we tested scaling patterns of body shape, body size, & limb lengths among squirrel ecotypes and described the underlying morphological components that contribute to body shape evolution 🧵1/x https://peerj.com/articles/14800/
Scaling patterns of body plans differ among squirrel ecotypes

Body size is often hypothesized to facilitate or constrain morphological diversity in the cranial, appendicular, and axial skeletons. However, how overall body shape scales with body size (i.e., body shape allometry) and whether these scaling patterns differ between ecological groups remains poorly investigated. Here, we test whether and how the relationships between body shape, body size, and limb lengths differ among species with different locomotor specializations, and describe the underlying morphological components that contribute to body shape evolution among squirrel (Sciuridae) ecotypes. We quantified the body size and shape of 87 squirrel species from osteological specimens held at museum collections. Using phylogenetic comparative methods, we first found that body shape and its underlying morphological components scale allometrically with body size, but these allometric patterns differ among squirrel ecotypes: chipmunks and gliding squirrels exhibited more elongate bodies with increasing body sizes whereas ground squirrels exhibited more robust bodies with increasing body size. Second, we found that only ground squirrels exhibit a relationship between forelimb length and body shape, where more elongate species exhibit relatively shorter forelimbs. Third, we found that the relative length of the ribs and elongation or shortening of the thoracic region contributes the most to body shape evolution across squirrels. Overall, our work contributes to the growing understanding of mammalian body shape evolution and how it is influenced by body size and locomotor ecology, in this case from robust subterranean to gracile gliding squirrels.

PeerJ