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Award ID contains: 2216648

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  1. Abstract The physical characteristics of an animal's head and pinna mark the beginning of auditory communication. Auditory communication is broadly achieved by receiving sounds from the environment and plays a vital role in an animal's ability to perceive and localize sounds. Natural history museums and collections, along with their vast repositories of specimens, provide a unique resource for examining how the variability in both the size and shape of the head and pinna causes variability in the detection of acoustic signals across species. Using this approach, we measured morphological features of the head and pinna on over 1200 preserved specimens ofPeromyscus boylii,P. californicus,P. gossypinus,P. leucopus,P. maniculatus, andP. truei, followed by a series of head‐related transfer functions (HRTFs) on several individuals to study the relationship between morphology and available auditory information. Our morphological results show significant variation in pinna length and width, as well as in the distance between the two ears across the six species. Interaural time differences and interaural level differences were calculated and demonstrated consistent results across species, suggesting the differences in head and pinna size do not significantly modify these cues. Not only does this study contribute to existing research on external morphology and auditory function, but it also provides valuable insight into the use of preserved zoological specimens in auditory research, an area that is currently understudied. 
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  2. Ecosystem services, essential for supporting life, are increasingly being altered by anthropogenic activities. This study focuses on the Cross Timbers ecoregion of the southern Great Plains, USA, where oak woodland and grassland co-exist. However, grasslands are rapidly transitioning to woodlands through a process known as woody plant encroachment, or are being considered for switchgrass biofuel production. Our objectives were to quantify the supporting (plant biodiversity, aboveground net primary productivity), provisioning (water quantity, forage production), regulating (soil organic carbon, flood regulation), and cultural services (hunting-based recreation, aesthetics) of four land use types—tallgrass prairie, oak woodland, eastern redcedar woodland, and switchgrass biofuel production—using the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment Framework. We integrated these services into an ecosystem sustainability index. Results showed that tallgrass prairie provided balanced services and ranked highest in this index. Eastern redcedar and switchgrass exhibited an imbalance in services, while oak woodland’s ranking varied with normalization methods. Our results highlight the need for grassland conservation by curtailment of eastern redcedar expansion. While oak woodland ranks high in cultural services, its restoration is recommended to enhance multiple ecosystem services. This study provides a roadmap for quantitatively evaluating ecosystem services to inform management decisions for ecosystem transitions and promote regional sustainability. Future research should broaden stakeholder engagement and explore integrated land use strategies within large watersheds encompassing multiple land uses to enhance regional environmental sustainability. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available February 1, 2026
  3. The hearing abilities of mammals are impacted by factors such as social cues, habitat, and physical characteristics. Despite being used commonly to study social behaviors, hearing of the monogamous prairie vole (Microtus ochrogaster) has never been characterized. In this study, anatomical features are measured and auditory brainstem responses (ABRs) are used to measure auditory capabilities of prairie voles, characterizing monaural and binaural hearing and hearing range. Sexually naive male and female voles were measured to characterize differences due to sex. It was found that prairie voles show a hearing range with greatest sensitivity between 8 and 32 kHz, binaural hearing across interaural time difference ranges appropriate for their head sizes. No differences are shown between the sexes in binaural hearing or hearing range (except at 1 kHz), however, female voles have increased amplitude of peripheral ABR waves I and II and longer latency of waves III and IV compared to males. The results confirm that prairie voles have a broad hearing range, binaural hearing consistent with rodents of similar size, and differences in amplitudes and thresholds of monaural physiological measures between the sexes. These data further highlight the necessity to understand sex-specific differences in neural processing that may underly variability in responses between sexes. 
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