The Evolutionary and Biogeographic History of Red- Backed Voles and Their Close Relatives (Rodentia: Arvicolinae) Brooks Kohli

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Evolutionary and Biogeographic History of Red- Backed Voles and Their Close Relatives (Rodentia: Arvicolinae) Brooks Kohli University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Biology ETDs Electronic Theses and Dissertations 5-1-2013 A Holarctic perspective on mammalian evolution: The evolutionary and biogeographic history of red- backed voles and their close relatives (Rodentia: Arvicolinae) Brooks Kohli Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/biol_etds Recommended Citation Kohli, Brooks. "A Holarctic perspective on mammalian evolution: The ve olutionary and biogeographic history of red-backed voles and their close relatives (Rodentia: Arvicolinae)." (2013). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/biol_etds/63 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Electronic Theses and Dissertations at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Biology ETDs by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. i Brooks A. Kohli Candidate Biology Department This thesis is approved, and it is acceptable in quality and form for publication. Approved by the Thesis Committee: Joseph A. Cook, Chairperson Steven Poe Christopher C. Witt ii A Holarctic perspective on mammalian evolution: The evolutionary and biogeographic history of red-backed voles and their close relatives (Rodentia: Arvicolinae) by BROOKS A. KOHLI B.S., Biological Sciences, Ohio University, 2010 THESIS Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Science Biology The University of New Mexico Albuquerque, New Mexico May 2013 iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS A thesis focusing on a group of species found across the Northern Hemisphere and on three continents could not be successful without the help of many people at all stages of the research. First of all, I have to thank my advisor, Joe Cook, for his guidance and encouragement throughout the whole process and for giving me the invaluable experiences I enjoyed in New Mexico, Alaska, and beyond. I would also like to thank Chris Witt and Steve Poe for their commitment and insight that greatly improved the quality of this work. Many thanks are also due to the members and associates of the Cook lab, past and present, for their advice, encouragement, help with lab work and learning analysis programs, and especially their friendship. Special thanks to Kelly Speer for her enthusiasm and dedication in the lab that made it possible to collect such a large amount of data in a short period of time. I am indebted to all the collectors of voles, over decades of difficult field research in some of the most remote regions of the world that afforded me this wealth of samples, and the natural history museums that have preserved them and made them available to me. I am grateful to the generous funding sources that supported this research, especially the UNM Department of Biology, Graduate and Professional Student Association, and Biology Graduate Student Association. Finally, my deepest gratitude to Adrienne for her endless help, support, and understanding and for always pushing me to be my best in everything I do. iv A Holarctic perspective on mammalian evolution: The evolutionary and biogeographic history of red-backed voles and their close relatives (Rodentia: Arvicolinae) by Brooks A. Kohli B.S., Biology, Ohio University, 2010 M.S., Biology, University of New Mexico, 2013 ABSTRACT The influence of Quaternary environmental changes on demography and geographic distribution is paramount to understanding how contemporary genetic diversity is partitioned in high-latitude species. This history of change in northern ecosystems sets the stage for forecasting how species inhabiting tundra and boreal forest will respond to the ongoing shift in climate. Utilizing broad geographic and taxonomic sampling, a multilocus species tree approach, ecological niche models, and population genetic techniques, I investigate the evolutionary and biogeographic history of a Holarctic mammal, the northern red-backed vole (Clethrionomys rutilus) and the systematics of the tribe it belongs to, Clethrionomyini. This tribe of forest and alpine voles is distributed throughout the Holarctic and diversified in the Northern Hemisphere over the last 5 MY. The biogeographic history of C. rutilus is characterized by subdivision and subsequent expansion from multiple refugia, including previously v unidentified refugia in central Asia. Several taxonomic issues are resolved by the use of multilocus data, including support of a polyphyletic Clethrionomys, prompting the suggestion of splitting the genus into two. Diversification in the tribe is not characterized by pulses of diversification, as previously suggested. The dynamic geographic, genealogic, and demographic history of C. rutilus and Clethrionomyini provides insight into the Quaternary biogeography of the northern high-latitudes in Asia and North America. vi TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter 1 Thesis Introduction ..........................................................................................1 References ......................................................................................................................3 Chapter 2 Phylogeography of a Holarctic rodent (Clethrionomys rutilus): Testing high-latitude biogeographic hypotheses and the dynamics of range shifts ..................5 Abstract ..........................................................................................................................5 1. Introduction ................................................................................................................6 1.1 Study species and hypotheses ............................................................................9 2. Methods....................................................................................................................12 2.1 Sampling and laboratory techniques ................................................................12 2.2 Phylogeny reconstruction.................................................................................15 2.3 Species tree estimation .....................................................................................15 2.4 Population genetic inference ............................................................................16 2.5 Divergence dates and demographic history .....................................................17 2.6 Species distribution modeling ..........................................................................18 3. Results ......................................................................................................................20 3.1 Phylogenies and phylogeographic structure ....................................................21 3.2 Species tree estimation .....................................................................................22 3.3 Population differentiation and demographic history ........................................23 3.4 Species distribution models .............................................................................25 4. Discussion ................................................................................................................27 4.1 Phylogeographic structure and biogeographic history of C. rutilus ................28 4.2 Demographic history ........................................................................................30 4.3 Contact zones ...................................................................................................32 4.4 Conclusion .......................................................................................................33 vii References ....................................................................................................................34 Figures and Tables .......................................................................................................43 Appendices ...................................................................................................................55 Chapter 3 Multilocus systematics and the characteristics of a recent radiation in a Holarctic tribe of rodents (Arvicolinae: Clethrionomyini) ..........................................68 Abstract ........................................................................................................................68 1. Introduction ..............................................................................................................69 1.1 Objectives ..............................................................................................................71 2. Methods....................................................................................................................71 2.1 Brief description of Clethrionomyini ...............................................................72 2.2 Sampling and laboratory techniques ................................................................74 2.3 Gene tree reconstruction ..................................................................................76 2.4 Species tree estimation and divergence dates ..................................................77 2.5 Sequence divergence and genetic diversity .....................................................78 2.6 Characterization of evolutionary patterns ........................................................79 3. Results ......................................................................................................................80 3.1 Gene tree reconstruction ..................................................................................81 3.2 Species tree estimation
Recommended publications
  • Likely to Have Habitat Within Iras That ALLOW Road
    Item 3a - Sensitive Species National Master List By Region and Species Group Not likely to have habitat within IRAs Not likely to have Federal Likely to have habitat that DO NOT ALLOW habitat within IRAs Candidate within IRAs that DO Likely to have habitat road (re)construction that ALLOW road Forest Service Species Under NOT ALLOW road within IRAs that ALLOW but could be (re)construction but Species Scientific Name Common Name Species Group Region ESA (re)construction? road (re)construction? affected? could be affected? Bufo boreas boreas Boreal Western Toad Amphibian 1 No Yes Yes No No Plethodon vandykei idahoensis Coeur D'Alene Salamander Amphibian 1 No Yes Yes No No Rana pipiens Northern Leopard Frog Amphibian 1 No Yes Yes No No Accipiter gentilis Northern Goshawk Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Ammodramus bairdii Baird's Sparrow Bird 1 No No Yes No No Anthus spragueii Sprague's Pipit Bird 1 No No Yes No No Centrocercus urophasianus Sage Grouse Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Cygnus buccinator Trumpeter Swan Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Falco peregrinus anatum American Peregrine Falcon Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Gavia immer Common Loon Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Histrionicus histrionicus Harlequin Duck Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Lanius ludovicianus Loggerhead Shrike Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Oreortyx pictus Mountain Quail Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Otus flammeolus Flammulated Owl Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Picoides albolarvatus White-Headed Woodpecker Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Picoides arcticus Black-Backed Woodpecker Bird 1 No Yes Yes No No Speotyto cunicularia Burrowing
    [Show full text]
  • Molecular Phylogeny and Biogeography of Oriental Voles: Genus Eothenomys (Muridae, Mammalia)
    MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS AND EVOLUTION Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 33 (2004) 349–362 www.elsevier.com/locate/ympev Molecular phylogeny and biogeography of Oriental voles: genus Eothenomys (Muridae, Mammalia) Jing Luoa,1, Dongming Yanga, Hitoshi Suzukic, Yingxiang Wangd, Wei-Jen Chene, Kevin L. Campbellf, Ya-ping Zhanga,b,* a Laboratory of Molecular Biology of Domestic Animals, and Cellular and Molecular Evolution, Kunming Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Kunming 650223, China b Laboratory of Conservation and Utilization of Bio-resource, Yunnan University, Kunming 650091, China c Laboratory of Ecology and Genetics, Graduate School of Environmental Earth Science, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060-0810, Japan d Mammalogy Division, Kunming Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Kunming, China e Department of Biology, University of Konstanz, D-78457, Konstanz, Germany f Department of Zoology, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Man., Canada R3T 2N2 Received 7 December 2003; revised 21 May 2004 Available online 29 July 2004 Abstract Oriental voles of the genus Eothenomys are predominantly distributed along the Southeastern shoulder of the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. Based on phylogenetic analyses of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene (1143bp) obtained from 23 specimens (eight spe- cies) of Oriental voles collected from this area, together with nucleotide sequences from six specimens (two species) of Japanese red- backed voles (Eothenomys andersoni and Eothenomys smithii) and five species of the closely related genus Clethrionomys, we revised the systematic status of Eothenomys. We also tested if vicariance could explain the observed high species diversity in this area by correlating estimated divergence times to species distribution patterns and corresponding paleo-geographic events.
    [Show full text]
  • Some Chinese Vertebrates
    LIBRARY UWVESilTY OF CALIFORNIA DAVIS flDemoirs of the flBuseum of Comparative Zoology? \ i II \ i; V \ i; ii COLLEG K. VOL. XL. No. i. SOME CHINESE VERTEBRATES. INTRODUCTION . BY SAMUEL HENSHAW. PISCES Bv SAMUEL GARM.AN. AMPHIBIA AND REPT1LIA BY THOMAS HARBOUR. AM . BY JOHN E. THAYER AND OUTRAM BANGS. MAMMALIA BY GLOVER M. ALLEN. WITH SIX PLATi.s. CAMBRIDGE, U.S.A.: priuteo for tbe Aueeum. AUGUST, 1912. ADemolrs of tbe flDuseum of Comparative Zoology AT HARVARD COLLEGE. VOL. XL. No. 4. SOME CHINESE VERTEBEATES. INTRODUCTION . BY SAMUEL HENSHAW. PISCES .... BY SAMUEL GARMAN. AMPHIBIA AND REPTILIA BY THOMAS BARBOUR. AVES .... BY JOHN E. THAYER AND OUTRAM BANGS. MAMMALIA BY GLOVER M. ALLEN. WITH SIX PLATES. CAMBRIDGE, U.S.A.: prtnteo for tbe flDuseum. AUGUST, 1912. SOME CHINESE VERTEBRATES. CONTENTS. PAO INTRODUCTION. BY SAMUEL HENSHAW 107 PISCES. BY SAMUEL CARMAN .111 AMPHIBIA AND REPTILIA. BY THOMAS BARBOUK .... .125 AVES. BY JOHN E. THAYER AND OUTRAM BANGS ...... 137 201 MAMMALIA. BY GLOVER M. ALLEN . INTRODUCTION. BY SAMUEL HENSHAW. THE collections described in the following pages were made in the Chinese provinces of Hupeh and Szechwan during the years 1907 and 1908. With hardly an exception they represent the work of Mr. Walter R. Zappey while he was attached to the expedition sent out by the Arnold Arboretum, under the direc- tion of Mr. E. H. Wilson, the well-known botanical collector. Mr. John E. Thayer, recognizing the need of zoological work in lower China, secured the consent of Prof. C. S. Sargent, the Director of the Arnold Arboretum, for a trained collector to accompany Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • Genus/Species Skull Ht Lt Wt Stage Range Abalosia U.Pliocene S America Abelmoschomys U.Miocene E USA A
    Genus/Species Skull Ht Lt Wt Stage Range Abalosia U.Pliocene S America Abelmoschomys U.Miocene E USA A. simpsoni U.Miocene Florida(US) Abra see Ochotona Abrana see Ochotona Abrocoma U.Miocene-Recent Peru A. oblativa 60 cm? U.Holocene Peru Abromys see Perognathus Abrosomys L.Eocene Asia Abrothrix U.Pleistocene-Recent Argentina A. illuteus living Mouse Lujanian-Recent Tucuman(ARG) Abudhabia U.Miocene Asia Acanthion see Hystrix A. brachyura see Hystrix brachyura Acanthomys see Acomys or Tokudaia or Rattus Acarechimys L-M.Miocene Argentina A. minutissimus Miocene Argentina Acaremys U.Oligocene-L.Miocene Argentina A. cf. Murinus Colhuehuapian Chubut(ARG) A. karaikensis Miocene? Argentina A. messor Miocene? Argentina A. minutissimus see Acarechimys minutissimus Argentina A. minutus Miocene? Argentina A. murinus Miocene? Argentina A. sp. L.Miocene Argentina A. tricarinatus Miocene? Argentina Acodon see Akodon A. angustidens see Akodon angustidens Pleistocene Brazil A. clivigenis see Akodon clivigenis Pleistocene Brazil A. internus see Akodon internus Pleistocene Argentina Acomys L.Pliocene-Recent Africa,Europe,W Asia,Crete A. cahirinus living Spiny Mouse U.Pleistocene-Recent Israel A. gaudryi U.Miocene? Greece Aconaemys see Pithanotomys A. fuscus Pliocene-Recent Argentina A. f. fossilis see Aconaemys fuscus Pliocene Argentina Acondemys see Pithanotomys Acritoparamys U.Paleocene-M.Eocene W USA,Asia A. atavus see Paramys atavus A. atwateri Wasatchian W USA A. cf. Francesi Clarkforkian Wyoming(US) A. francesi(francesci) Wasatchian-Bridgerian Wyoming(US) A. wyomingensis Bridgerian Wyoming(US) Acrorhizomys see Clethrionomys Actenomys L.Pliocene-L.Pleistocene Argentina A. maximus Pliocene Argentina Adelomyarion U.Oligocene France A. vireti U.Oligocene France Adelomys U.Eocene France A.
    [Show full text]
  • Morphological Disparity Among Rock Voles of the Genus <I>Alticola</I
    University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Erforschung biologischer Ressourcen der Mongolei Institut für Biologie der Martin-Luther-Universität / Exploration into the Biological Resources of Halle-Wittenberg Mongolia, ISSN 0440-1298 2012 Morphological Disparity among Rock Voles of the Genus Alticola from Mongolia, Kazakhstan and Russia (Rodentia, Cricetidae) V. N. Bolshakov Russian Academy of Sciences, [email protected] I. A. Vasilyeva Russian Aacdemy of Sciences A. G. Vasilyev Russian Academy of Sciences Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/biolmongol Part of the Asian Studies Commons, Biodiversity Commons, Environmental Sciences Commons, Nature and Society Relations Commons, and the Other Animal Sciences Commons Bolshakov, V. N.; Vasilyeva, I. A.; and Vasilyev, A. G., "Morphological Disparity among Rock Voles of the Genus Alticola from Mongolia, Kazakhstan and Russia (Rodentia, Cricetidae)" (2012). Erforschung biologischer Ressourcen der Mongolei / Exploration into the Biological Resources of Mongolia, ISSN 0440-1298. 13. http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/biolmongol/13 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Institut für Biologie der Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in Erforschung biologischer Ressourcen der Mongolei / Exploration into the Biological Resources of Mongolia, ISSN 0440-1298 by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. Copyright 2012, Martin-Luther-Universität Halle Wittenberg, Halle (Saale). Used by permission. Erforsch. biol. Ress. Mongolei (Halle/Saale) 2012 (12): 105 –115 Morphological disparity among Rock voles of the genus Alticola from Mongolia, Kazakhstan and Russia (Rodentia, Cricetidae) V.N. Bolshakov, I.A.
    [Show full text]
  • Diverzita a Biologie Kryptosporidií Hrabošovitých (Arvicolinae)
    JIHOČESKÁ UNIVERZITA V ČESKÝCH BUDĚJOVICÍCH ZEMĚDĚLSKÁ FAKULTA Diverzita a biologie kryptosporidií hrabošovitých (Arvicolinae) Diversity and biology of Cryptosporidium in Arvicolinae rodents disertační práce Ing. Michaela Horčičková Školitel: prof. Ing. Martin Kváč, Ph.D. České Budějovice, 2018 Disertační práce Horčičková, M. 2018: Diverzita a biologie kryptosporidií hrabošovitých (Arvicolinae) [Diversity and biology of Cryptosporidium in Arvicolinae rodents]. Jihočeská univerzita v Českých Budějovicích, Zemědělská fakulta, 123 s. PROHLÁŠENÍ Předkládám tímto k posouzení a obhajobě disertační práci zpracovanou na závěr doktorského studia na Zemědělské fakultě Jihočeské univerzity v Českých Budějovicích. Prohlašuji tímto, že jsem práci vypracovala samostatně, s použitím odborné literatury a dostupných zdrojů uvedených v seznamu, jenž je součástí této práce. Dále prohlašuji, že v souladu s § 47b zákona č. 111/1998 Sb. v platném znění, souhlasím se zveřejněním své disertační práce a to v úpravě vzniklé vypuštěním vyznačených částí archivovaných Zemědělskou fakultou, elektronickou cestou ve veřejně přístupné sekci databáze STAG, provozované Jihočeskou univerzitou v Českých Budějovicích na jejích internetových stránkách. Prohlášení o vědeckém příspěvku výsledků práce Tato disertační práce je založena na výsledcích řady vědeckých publikací, které vznikly za účasti dalších spoluautorů. Na tomto místě prohlašuji, že jsem v rámci studia diverzity a hostitelské specifity kryptosporidií parazitujících u hrabošovitých provedla většinu původního výzkumu a tato práce je založena na vědeckých výsledcích, jimiž jsem hlavní autorkou. V Českých Budějovicích dne 8. července 2018 …………………………… Ing. Michaela Horčičková SEZNAM IMPAKTOVANÝCH PUBLIKACÍ Disertační práce vychází z těchto publikací: Horčičková M., Čondlová Š., Holubová N., Sak B., Květoňová D., Hlásková L., Konečný R., Sedláček F., Clark M.E., Giddings C., McEvoy J.M., Kváč M. 2018: Diversity of Cryptosporidium in common voles and description of Cryptosporidium alticolis sp.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction to the Southern Blue Ridge Ecoregional Conservation Plan
    SOUTHERN BLUE RIDGE ECOREGIONAL CONSERVATION PLAN Summary and Implementation Document March 2000 THE NATURE CONSERVANCY and the SOUTHERN APPALACHIAN FOREST COALITION Southern Blue Ridge Ecoregional Conservation Plan Summary and Implementation Document Citation: The Nature Conservancy and Southern Appalachian Forest Coalition. 2000. Southern Blue Ridge Ecoregional Conservation Plan: Summary and Implementation Document. The Nature Conservancy: Durham, North Carolina. This document was produced in partnership by the following three conservation organizations: The Nature Conservancy is a nonprofit conservation organization with the mission to preserve plants, animals and natural communities that represent the diversity of life on Earth by protecting the lands and waters they need to survive. The Southern Appalachian Forest Coalition is a nonprofit organization that works to preserve, protect, and pass on the irreplaceable heritage of the region’s National Forests and mountain landscapes. The Association for Biodiversity Information is an organization dedicated to providing information for protecting the diversity of life on Earth. ABI is an independent nonprofit organization created in collaboration with the Network of Natural Heritage Programs and Conservation Data Centers and The Nature Conservancy, and is a leading source of reliable information on species and ecosystems for use in conservation and land use planning. Photocredits: Robert D. Sutter, The Nature Conservancy EXECUTIVE SUMMARY This first iteration of an ecoregional plan for the Southern Blue Ridge is a compendium of hypotheses on how to conserve species nearest extinction, rare and common natural communities and the rich and diverse biodiversity in the ecoregion. The plan identifies a portfolio of sites that is a vision for conservation action, enabling practitioners to set priorities among sites and develop site-specific and multi-site conservation strategies.
    [Show full text]
  • GIS Assessment of the Status of Protected Areas in East Asia
    CIS Assessment of the Status of Protected Areas in East Asia Compiled and edited by J. MacKinnon, Xie Yan, 1. Lysenko, S. Chape, I. May and C. Brown March 2005 IUCN V 9> m The World Conservation Union UNEP WCMC Digitized by the Internet Archive in 20/10 with funding from UNEP-WCMC, Cambridge http://www.archive.org/details/gisassessmentofs05mack GIS Assessment of the Status of Protected Areas in East Asia Compiled and edited by J. MacKinnon, Xie Yan, I. Lysenko, S. Chape, I. May and C. Brown March 2005 UNEP-WCMC IUCN - The World Conservation Union The designation of geographical entities in this book, and the presentation of the material, do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of UNEP, UNEP-WCMC, and IUCN concerning the legal status of any country, territory, or area, or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. UNEP-WCMC or its collaborators have obtained base data from documented sources believed to be reliable and made all reasonable efforts to ensure the accuracy of the data. UNEP-WCMC does not warrant the accuracy or reliability of the base data and excludes all conditions, warranties, undertakings and terms express or implied whether by statute, common law, trade usage, course of dealings or otherwise (including the fitness of the data for its intended use) to the fullest extent permitted by law. The views expressed in this publication do not necessarily reflect those of UNEP, UNEP-WCMC, and IUCN. Produced by: UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre and IUCN, Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK Cffti IUCN UNEP WCMC The World Conservation Union Copyright: © 2005 UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre Reproduction of this publication for educational or other non-commercial purposes is authorized without prior written permission from the copyright holder provided the source is fully acknowledged.
    [Show full text]
  • Lead Levels in the Bones of Small Rodents from Alpine and Subalpine Habitats in the Tian-Shan Mountains, Kyrgyzstan
    atmosphere Communication Lead Levels in the Bones of Small Rodents from Alpine and Subalpine Habitats in the Tian-Shan Mountains, Kyrgyzstan Zuzana Ballová * ID and Marián Janiga Institute of High Mountain Biology, University of Žilina, Tatranská Javorina 7, 05956 Žilina, Slovakia; [email protected] * Correspondence: [email protected]; Tel.: +42-152-449-9108 Received: 23 November 2017; Accepted: 20 January 2018; Published: 23 January 2018 Abstract: High mountain areas are an appropriate indicator of anthropogenic lead (Pb), which can reach remote mountain ranges through long distance atmospheric transport. We compared the content of Pb in ecologically equivalent rodent species from Tian-Shan with European mountain ranges including the Tatra, Vitosha and Rila mountains. We used bone tissues from terminal tail vertebrae of small rodents for detection of Pb levels through electro-thermal atomic absorption spectroscopy (AAS). The tailbones of Tian-Shan rodents had significantly lower Pb levels than snow voles from the Tatra Mountains, but there was no significant difference in comparison with the Vitosha and Rila mountains. We can conclude that Tian-Shan shows lower pollution by Pb than the Tatras, which may be a result of prolonged industrialization of north-western Europe and strongly prevailing west winds in this region. Keywords: lead pollution; alpine environments; Alticola argentatus; Microtus gregalis; atmospheric deposition; heavy metals 1. Introduction Atmospheric lead (Pb) fluctuations are dominated by anthropogenic sources. Even in areas far removed from industrial emission sources, Pb concentrations in the surface soil layers are far above their natural concentration range [1]. Anthropogenic Pb could therefore reach more remote high mountains through long distance atmospheric transport [2].
    [Show full text]
  • Hystrx It. J. Mamm. (Ns) Supp. (2007) V European Congress of Mammalogy
    Hystrx It. J. Mamm . (n.s.) Supp. (2007) V European Congress of Mammalogy RODENTS AND LAGOMORPHS 51 Hystrx It. J. Mamm . (n.s.) Supp. (2007) V European Congress of Mammalogy 52 Hystrx It. J. Mamm . (n.s.) Supp. (2007) V European Congress of Mammalogy A COMPARATIVE GEOMETRIC MORPHOMETRIC ANALYSIS OF NON-GEOGRAPHIC VARIATION IN TWO SPECIES OF MURID RODENTS, AETHOMYS INEPTUS FROM SOUTH AFRICA AND ARVICANTHIS NILOTICUS FROM SUDAN EITIMAD H. ABDEL-RAHMAN 1, CHRISTIAN T. CHIMIMBA, PETER J. TAYLOR, GIANCARLO CONTRAFATTO, JENNIFER M. LAMB 1 Sudan Natural History Museum, Faculty of Science, University of Khartoum P. O. Box 321 Khartoum, Sudan Non-geographic morphometric variation particularly at the level of sexual dimorphism and age variation has been extensively documented in many organisms including rodents, and is useful for establishing whether to analyse sexes separately or together and for selecting adult specimens to consider for subsequent data recording and analysis. However, such studies have largely been based on linear measurement-based traditional morphometric analyses that mainly focus on the partitioning of overall size- rather than shape-related morphological variation. Nevertheless, recent advances in unit-free, landmark/outline-based geometric morphometric analyses offer a new tool to assess shape-related morphological variation. In the present study, we used geometric morphometric analysis to comparatively evaluate non-geographic variation in two geographically disparate murid rodent species, Aethmoys ineptus from South Africa and Arvicanthis niloticus from Sudan , the results of which are also compared with previously published results based on traditional morphometric data. Our results show that while the results of the traditional morphometric analyses of both species were congruent, they were not sensitive enough to detect some signals of non-geographic morphological variation.
    [Show full text]
  • Diversity of Late Neogene–Pleistocene Small Mammals of the Baikalian Region and Implications for Paleoenvironment and Biostratigraphy: an Overview
    ARTICLE IN PRESS Quaternary International 179 (2008) 190–195 Diversity of Late Neogene–Pleistocene small mammals of the Baikalian region and implications for paleoenvironment and biostratigraphy: An overview Nadezhda V. Alexeeva, Margarita A. Erbajevaà Geological Institute, Siberian Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences, Sahianova Street 6a, 670047 Ulan-Ude, Russia Available online 22 October 2007 Abstract Gradual cooling in the Northern latitudes and intensive orogenic processes led to a prominent environmental change in Eurasia during the Pliocene. The climate changed towards arid and cool conditions. This resulted in a significant reorganization of the biogeocenosis of the Baikalian region. Several open landscape dwellers appeared in mammal faunas. The diverse small mammal species are characteristic of the faunas of Transbaikalia and Prebaikalia. However, the Prebaikalian fauna slightly differs from Transbaikalian one as it includes some peculiar species. Further trends of gradual climatic changes led to significant differences in the biota of these two regions that continue to exist at present. r 2007 Published by Elsevier Ltd. 1. Introduction environments and climatic conditions determine a high diversity of faunal associations and plant communities. The Baikalian region includes the territories of Pre- At present, the vast territory of Prebaikalia is occupied baikalia and Western Transbaikalia, respectively, located mainly by dense conifer forest, although steppe, meadow westwards and eastwards of Lake Baikal. These territories and swampy areas are present as well. The most abundant stretch from 471Nto591N and 1021E to 1141E(Fig. 1). and diverse taxa in Prebaikalian fauna are forest inhabi- Prebaikalia is situated on the south-eastern borderland of tants some of which are widely distributed in the adjacent the Siberian platform, one of the stable blocks of the areas; steppe, and dry steppe, meadow species inhabit Asiatic continent, while Western Transbaikalia is a part of restricted areas (Lyamkin, 1994).
    [Show full text]
  • Contributions to the Mammalogy of Mongolia, with a Checklist of Species for the Country David S
    University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Special Publications Museum of Southwestern Biology 12-5-2002 Contributions to the Mammalogy of Mongolia, with a Checklist of Species for the Country David S. Tinnin Jonathan L. Dunnum Jorge Salazar-Bravo Nyamsuren Batsaikhan M. Scott urB t See next page for additional authors Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/msb_special_publications Recommended Citation Tinnin, David S.; Jonathan L. Dunnum; Jorge Salazar-Bravo; Nyamsuren Batsaikhan; M. Scott urB t; Scott L. Gardner; and Terry L. Yates. "Contributions to the Mammalogy of Mongolia, with a Checklist of Species for the Country." (2002). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/msb_special_publications/10 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Museum of Southwestern Biology at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Special Publications by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Authors David S. Tinnin, Jonathan L. Dunnum, Jorge Salazar-Bravo, Nyamsuren Batsaikhan, M. Scott urB t, Scott L. Gardner, and Terry L. Yates This article is available at UNM Digital Repository: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/msb_special_publications/10 SPECIAL PUBLICATION THE MUSEUM OF SOUTHWESTERN BIOLOGY NUMBER 6, pp. 1-38 5 DECEMBER 2002 Contributions to the Mammalogy of Mongolia, with a Checklist of Species for the Country David S. Tinnin, Jonathan L. Dunnum, Jorge Salazar-Bravo, Nyamsuren Batsaikhan, M. Scott Burt, Scott
    [Show full text]