TY - JOUR AU - McGrath, Kate AU - Eriksen, Amandine B. AU - García Martínez, Daniel AU - Galbany, Jordi AU - Gómez Robles, Aida AU - Massey, Jason S. AU - Fatica, M. AU - Glowacka, Halszka AU - Arbenz Smith, Keely AU - Muvunyi, Richard AU - Stoinski, Tara S. AU - Cranfield, Michael R. AU - Gilardi, Kirsten AU - Shalukoma, Chantal AU - Merode, Emmanuel de AU - Gilissen, Emmanuel AU - Tocheri, Matthew W. AU - McFarlin, Shannon C. AU - Heuzé, Yann PY - 2022 DO - 10.1098/rspb.2021.2564 SN - 0962-8452 Electronic: 1471-2954 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/71830 T2 - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences AB - Mountain gorillas are particularly inbred compared to other gorillas and even the most inbred human populations. As mountain gorilla skeletal material accumulated during the 1970s, researchers noted their pronounced facial asymmetry and hypothesized... LA - eng M2 - 1 PB - The Royal Society KW - Asymmetry KW - Great apes KW - Geometric morphometrics KW - Inbreeding KW - Stress TI - Facial asymmetry tracks genetic diversity among Gorilla subspecies TY - journal article VL - 289 ER -