Home
Finance
Travel
Shopping
Academic
Library
Home
Discover
Spaces
 
 
  • Skulls Tell Story of Urban Adaptation
  • Museum Collections Enable Time Travel
  • Broader Urban Evolution Pattern
Chicago rodents evolving in real time to city life

Chicago's urban rodents are evolving in real time, developing altered skull shapes as they adapt to city living over the past century, according to research published today in the journal Integrative and Comparative Biology.

Scientists at the Field Museum analyzed skulls from 132 chipmunks and 193 voles collected over 125 years and found measurable changes linked directly to urbanization rather than climate shifts, providing rare documentation of rapid evolutionary adaptation to human-dominated environments.

User avatar
Curated by
mialua
3 min read
Published
3,463
38
phys.org favicon
Phys.org
Chicago's rodents are evolving to handle city living - Phys.org
popsci.com favicon
Popular Science
City living is changing rodent skulls in Chicago | Popular Science
urbanevolution-litc.com favicon
Life in the City
The Superpowers of Urban Rats: How urban life transforms rodents
Chicago's rodents are evolving to handle city living
phys.org
Skulls Tell Story of Urban Adaptation

Chipmunks living in the Chicago area developed larger skulls but smaller teeth over the past 100 years, changes researchers attribute to dietary shifts toward softer, human-related foods12.

"Over the last century, chipmunks in Chicago have been getting bigger, but their teeth are getting smaller," said Bruno Feijó, a study author, according to Popular Science. "We believe this is probably associated with the kind of food they're eating. They're probably eating more human-related food, which makes them bigger, but not necessarily healthier"12.

Voles showed different adaptations, with smaller auditory bullae—bone structures housing the inner ear. "We think this may relate to the city being loud—having these bones be smaller might help dampen excess environmental noise," said Stephanie Smith, a mammalogist at the Field Museum2.

popsci.com favicon
phys.org favicon
2 sources
Museum Collections Enable Time Travel

The research leveraged the Field Museum's extensive specimen collection, with study co-authors Alyssa Stringer and Luna Bian measuring skull dimensions and creating 3D scans of select specimens1.

"Museum collections allow you to time travel," Smith said in a statement. "Instead of being limited to studying specimens collected over the course of one project, or one person's lifetime, natural history collections allow you to look at things over a more evolutionarily relevant time scale"1.

The team used satellite imagery dating to 1940 to quantify urbanization levels and correlated this data with morphological changes. Climate variations did not explain the skull alterations, but urbanization patterns did12.

popsci.com favicon
phys.org favicon
2 sources
Broader Urban Evolution Pattern

The Chicago findings align with growing evidence of rapid urban evolution documented in cities worldwide. Previous research has shown similar adaptations in New York rats, which developed longer noses and shorter teeth between 1890 and 20101.

These changes represent examples of evolution occurring over decades rather than millennia when species face dramatic environmental pressures, though Smith cautioned against viewing the adaptations as wholly positive.

"These voles with smaller ear bones and chipmunks with smaller teeth are proof of how profoundly humans affect our environment and our capacity to make the world harder for our fellow animals to live in," she said2.

urbanevolution-litc.com favicon
phys.org favicon
2 sources
Related
How are pest control companies adapting strategies to these evolving urban rodent traits
What implications does rapid urban evolution have for pharmaceutical testing using rodent models
Which other major cities are documenting similar evolutionary adaptations in urban wildlife
Discover more
Study finds alpha males aren't universal across primate societies
Study finds alpha males aren't universal across primate societies
A comprehensive study of primate societies has found that the archetypal alpha male—the dominant figure that rules through aggression and controls mating access—is far from universal across species. The research, published this month, challenges long-held assumptions about male dominance patterns in the primate world. The five-year study examined 253 populations across 121 primate species,...
488
Oldest North American pterosaur fossil found in Arizona
Oldest North American pterosaur fossil found in Arizona
Researchers have unearthed the oldest known pterosaur fossil in North America, a 209-million-year-old winged reptile small enough to perch on a human shoulder, according to a study published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The discovery at Arizona's Petrified Forest National Park fills a critical gap in the fossil record and reveals that modern vertebrate...
505
Giant Roman shoes found at Hadrian's Wall puzzle experts
Giant Roman shoes found at Hadrian's Wall puzzle experts
Archaeologists working at a Roman fort in northern England have uncovered eight leather shoes from nearly 2,000 years ago that measure the equivalent of modern size 13 to 14, raising questions about the physical characteristics of the people who once lived along Hadrian's Wall. The discovery at Magna Roman Fort in Northumberland represents an unusual concentration of large footwear that differs...
9,013
Wild orcas offer prey to humans in 34 documented cases
Wild orcas offer prey to humans in 34 documented cases
Wild orcas have attempted to share their prey with humans in at least 34 documented encounters across four oceans over the past two decades, offering everything from harbor seals to starfish in what researchers believe may be the marine mammals' way of trying to understand and build relationships with people. A study published Monday in the Journal of Comparative Psychology represents the first...
11,658