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New law of nature may have been discovered in South America

Recent research has found many animals are shape-shifting to cope with global warming.

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The Andes mountain range in South America. (NASA via Wikimedia Commons)

By Mark Waghorn via SWNS

A new law of nature could have been discovered as scientists think rain causes species to grow larger after a discovery in South America.

An international team of researchers found that shaggy soft haired mice changed in size, based on which side of the Andes it lives on.

The ones on the wetter side were larger despite being genetically identical to the ones on the drier side.

Scientists believe that wet soil fuels more fruit and veg for them to snack on - so they develop larger bodies.

The phenomenon may be a law of nature - with implications for climate change.

Corresponding author Dr. Noe de la Sancha, of DePaul University, Chicago, said: "There are a bunch of ecogeographic rules that scientists use to explain trends that we see again and again in nature.

"With this paper, I think we might have found a new one - the rain shadow effect can cause changes of size and shape in mammals."

An international team analyzed individuals from the mountain range in Patagonia and noticed something they couldn't explain.

Those from the western side were bigger than peers from the east - even though DNA said they were all from the same species.

The researchers examined 450 skulls from the southern tip of South America and found existing biological theories didn't explain the differences.

So they came up with another. Mice on the western slopes were bigger because that side gets more rain - meaning there's more plentiful food.

Dr. de la Sancha said: "They're very cute...they have soft white bellies. They live in the mountains, which makes them unique, but they're also found in lower elevations. Overall, they're not very well-studied."

His colleague Pablo Teta at the Bernardino Rivadavia Natural Sciences Argentine Museum, Buenos Aires, began studying them as part of his doctoral thesis.

Dr. de la Sancha said: "He saw some individuals of the species were really big, and some were really small. He thought they were different species.

"But their mitochondrial DNA suggested they were one species, even though they are so different. We wanted to explore why that is, to see if they were following some sort of rule."

There are lots of 'rules' of nature explaining patterns we see in life. For instance, Bergmann’s rule explains why animals of the same species are bigger in higher latitudes.

White-tailed deer in Canada are larger and bulkier than their skinny Floridian cousins. Bergmann’s rule explains this is because having a thicker body in relation to your surface area helps you retain heat better, the same way big pieces of food take longer to cool down than smaller bites.

To try to find a pattern to explain the differences in size, the researchers used statistical analyses to compare measurements of the mouse skulls.

They then tried to map their findings onto different biological rules to see if any fit. Bergmann’s rule didn’t work; there wasn’t a strong correlation between mouse size and how far north or south the specimen lived.

Other rules emphasize the role of temperature or rainfall, with mixed results for different groups and situations.

Latitude, or one of 19 other bioclimatic, temperature or precipitation variables, were ruled out as causing varying shapes and sizes of the mice. But there did seem to be a pattern with longitude - how far east or west they lived.

De la Sancha and colleagues realised this might be related to what biologists call the 'resource rule.'

He said: "This rule suggests where there are more resources, individuals from the same species tend to be larger than where there are fewer resources.

"For instance, some deer mice that are found in deserts and other habitats tend to be smaller in drier portions of their habitats.

"Another hypothesis suggests that some animals tend to be smaller in mountains versus adjacent plains in North America. Our study found a mixed result of these rules."

He had a 'Eureka!' moment while teaching a class of undergraduates at Chicago State University.

Dr. de la Sancha said: "Believe it or not, when I was teaching ecology, one of the things that I was teaching about was the rain shadow effect."

It is a product of the way that water vapor travels over mountain ranges. It rises as the air picks it up and the ocean naturally warms.

Prevailing winds, like the jet stream that goes from west to east, pushes it to land. Over mountains, the air gets colder.

The water vapor condenses and falls as rain. If the mountain is really high, the air will run out of moisture by the time it gets to the far side of the peak.

Dr de la Sancha said: "Essentially, one side of the mountain will be humid and rainy, and the other will have cold, dry air.

"On some mountains, the difference is extreme. One face can be a tropical rainforest, and the other side will be almost desert-like.

"There is a rain shadow effect in most mountains on the planet, we see this phenomenon all over the world.”

Dr de la Sancha realized the rain shadow could explain why there was more food on the western side of the Andes - and the mice there were bigger.

He said: "That same day, I went home and wrote to Pablo. I was like, 'Dude, we need to talk about the rain shadow.'"

Indeed, it neatly matched up with the rodents' sizes - the first time anyone has demonstrated the effects of the rain shadow on mammal size. The researchers suspect it applies widely.

Dr de la Sancha said: "It is exciting because it could potentially be something that is more universal. We think it may be more of a rule than an anomaly. It would be worthwhile to test it on lots of different taxa."

But the findings may mean the shaggy soft-haired mice are in for a rough time - along with many fellow animals.

He said: "The scary part is we show that, at least to some effect, climate patterns are important to determine the mice's morphology - their shape and size, either directly or indirectly through the resources they can find.

"With climate change, we know we’re going to see dramatic changes in temperature throughout the year, and changes in precipitation.

"While they might not be the most important variables affecting the mice's well-being, they are important in determining available food sources."

If the weather patterns change and affect the plants that grow in the region, the mice might no longer be able to thrive as they once did.

Animals are already moving up mountains to escape the effects of climate change, said Dr. de la Sancha.

He explained: " At a certain point, you run out of mountain, there is nowhere else to go. We do not know what is going to happen, but it does not seem good."

The unclear future is a good reason to study animals like mice that often go unnoticed, said Dr. de la Sancha.

He added: "It is important to understand how little we know about most small mammals. They can be good indicators of long-term changes in our environment.

"We need to study them more. Our findings also show why museum collections are so important.

"This study was based on museum collections from Argentina, Chile, and the US. It is an amalgamation of years and years of collecting and big data sets."

Recent research has found many animals are shape-shifting to cope with global warming. Birds are developing bigger beaks - and elephants and rabbits bigger ears. The appendages help them cool off.

Added Mr. Teta: "This paper would not have been possible without museum collections and highlights the importance of museum and collection-based research and its support worldwide.

"This type of research helps us better understand the big-picture, universal rules of how life on Earth works."

The study is in the Journal of Biogeography.

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