Brain size is correlated with endangerment status in mammals

Proceedings. Biological Sciences
Eric S Abelson

Abstract

Increases in relative encephalization (RE), brain size after controlling for body size, comes at a great metabolic cost and is correlated with a host of cognitive traits, from the ability to count objects to higher rates of innovation. Despite many studies examining the implications and trade-offs accompanying increased RE, the relationship between mammalian extinction risk and RE is unknown. I examine whether mammals with larger levels of RE are more or less likely to be at risk of endangerment than less-encephalized species. I find that extant species with large levels of encephalization are at greater risk of endangerment, with this effect being strongest in species with small body sizes. These results suggest that RE could be a valuable asset in estimating extinction vulnerability. Additionally, these findings suggest that the cost-benefit trade-off of RE is different in large-bodied species when compared with small-bodied species.

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Citations

May 10, 2016·Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution·Alejandro Gonzalez-VoyerEloy Revilla
Jun 1, 2016·Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution·Masahito TsuboiNiclas Kolm
Mar 28, 2017·The Anatomical Record : Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology·Jean-Marie GraïcBruno Cozzi
Oct 28, 2019·Oecologia·Eric S Abelson

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