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Rodentia and Lagomorpha

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Title: Rodentia and Lagomorpha


1
Rodentia and Lagomorpha
  • The Last of the Taxonomohegans!

2
Rodentia and Lagomorpha
  • Hawks, John D., Department of Anthropology,
    University of Michigan
  • PHYLOGENETIC RELATIONSHIPS OF THE ORDER
    LAGOMORPHA (RABBITS, HARES, AND PIKAS)
  • The taxonomic position of rabbits and their
    relatives (Order Lagomorpha) has been changed
    several times since Linnaeus classified them as a
    family within the Order Rodentia.
  • The close relationship between lagomorphs and
    rodents has been supported by numerous studies of
    morphological characters.

3
Rodentia and Lagomorpha
  • Recently, molecular studies have cast doubt on
    this relationship, most notably suggesting that
    Lagomorpha is most closely related to Primates.
  • In this study, thirty-six diverse species of
    lagomorphs, primates, rodents, and other mammals
    are sampled at up to three mitochondrial DNA
    loci, including the 12s rRNA, cytochrome C
    subunit II and cytochrome B genes.
  • Parsimony analysis of these gene sequences
    supports the sister group relationship of
    Lagomorpha and Rodentia.

4
Rodentia
  • Largest mammalian order - 28 families and 2016
    currently recognized species
  • Cosmopolitan distribution native everywhere
    except Antarctica, New Zealand, and a few oceanic
    islands
  • Adapted to a wide range of habitats terrestrial,
    arboreal, scansorial, fossorial, and semiaquatic
  • Found in all biomes, often commensal with humans

5
Rodentia
  • Most rodents are small (20-100 g), but one is
    large, capybara (Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris) - up
    to 50 kg
  • Systematics is complex and confused - this is
    putting it mildly!
  • All things considered, they still have some
    general morphological characteristics.

6
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7
Rodentia Morphology
  • Diagnostic feature - single pair of upper and
    lower incisors
  • Incisors are open-rooted and ever-growing used
    for gnawing (Rodentia from Latin rodere - to
    gnaw)
  • Anterior side is enamel and wears slower than
    posterior side - forms a chisel!
  • Rodents have a diastema!
  • Lips can close in front or behind teeth.
  • External or internal pouches

8
Rodentia Morphology
  • Teeth greatly reduced from the primitive
    eutherian number
  • Typical - 1/1, 0/0, 0/0, 3/3 16
  • Never have more than two premolars
  • No species has more than 22 teeth, except the
    silvery mole rat 1/1, 0/0, 3/3, 3/3 28
  • Herbivorous or omnivorous
  • Coprophagy reported in 11 families
  • Females have a duplex uterus and males, a baculum

9
Aplodontidae
  • Monotypic family - the mountain beaver
  • Aplodontia is endemic to the Pacific northwest
    British Columbia to northern California
  • Most primitive living rodent
  • Associated with areas of heavy rainfall
  • Not a beaver and does not live in the mountains!

10
Sciuridae
  • 50 genera and 273 species
  • Everywhere except Australia, Madagascar, and
    southern SA
  • Two families
  • Sciurinae - tree and ground squirrels
  • Petauristinae - flying squirrels

11
Sciuridae
  • Tree squirrels den in trees or leaf nests
  • In boreal or cool temperate areas, most species
    hibernate
  • Diurnal and arboreal
  • Ground squirrels are terrestrial and burrow, and
    many aestivate and hibernate

Squirrel Fishing
12
Sciuridae
Red Squirrel
13
Sciuridae
Fox Squirrel
14
Flying Sciuridae
  • Flying squirrels have a furred Patagium between
    front and hind limbs
  • Some can glide up to 450 m and turn 90o
  • Flying squirrels and Australian gliders -
    convergent evolution!

15
Geomyidae
  • 5 genera and 35 species
  • North and Central America
  • In soil conducive to digging
  • Visual and auditory ability reduced
  • Thick, chunky bodies
  • Small eyes and pinnae
  • Eat subterranean parts of plants- roots and
    tubers
  • The pocket gophers

16
Heteromyidae
  • Kangaroo rats, kangaroo mice, pocket mice - 59
    species and 6 genera
  • SW Canada, Central America, NW SA
  • Look similar to kangaroos!
  • Bipedal jumpers
  • Externally opening, furred cheek pouches - carry
    seeds back to burrows for storage - eat
    perishables!

17
Heteromyidae
Kangaroo Rat
  • Skulls are distinctive
  • Infraorbital foramen pierces the rostrum
  • Several species have greatly inflated auditory
    bullae - increase auditory acuity - nocturnal
    predators - also better able to maintain balance

18
Heteromyidae
  • Live in arid areas
  • Adapted to dry , desert conditions
  • Can live without free water for long periods
  • Produce concentrated urine
  • Nocturnal, inactive in burrows during the day
  • Several species endangered!

Banner-tailed Kangaroo Rat (Dipodomys
spectabilis Merriam)
19
Castoridae
  • Two extant species
  • Northern hemisphere
  • Canadian beaver (Castor canadensis)
  • European beaver (C. fiber)
  • Name from castor glands and anal glands near
    cloaca in both males and females

20
Castoridae
  • Adapted to aquatic life
  • Large - lt35 kg
  • Fine insulating underfur
  • Spatulate tail
  • Nictating membrane
  • Valvular nostrils
  • Ears close under water
  • Webbed hind feet

21
Pedetidae
  • Single species - Pedetes capensis - springhare
  • Sandy soils or cultivated areas in southern
    Africa
  • Large hind feet and muscular hind limbs
  • Bipedal locomotion
  • Spring into the air from the exit of their
    burrows
  • Nocturnal and herbivorous

22
Pedetidae
23
Anomaluridae
  • Scaly-tailed flying squirrels
  • West and Central Africa - tropical forests
  • 7 species, 3 genera
  • Almost all have well-developed patagium that
    encloses forelimbs, hind limbs, and tail

24
Ctenodactylidae
Mahatmagundi
  • 4 genera and 5 species
  • Gundis - sparsely vegetated, rocky, semiarid
    regions of Africa from Morocco east through
    Somalia
  • Similar to pikas
  • Dense pelage - comb with comblike hind toes!
  • Diurnal, colonial, herbivorous

(Ctenodactylus gundi)
25
Muridae
  • Muroid rodents a diverse group!
  • Mole rates, New World mice, rats, voles,
    lemmings, and allies (formerly Cricetidae)
    bamboo rats, and spiny dormice Old World rats
    and mice

26
Muridae
Southern Bog Lemming
27
Dipodidae
  • 11 genera of jerboas and 4 genera of birch mice
    and jumping mice
  • Tail exceeds head and body length in all
  • Dormant or hibernate in burrows during the winter
    - up to 9 months in some species
  • Jerboas can enter torpor in the summer during
    very hot, dry periods.

28
Myoxidae
  • 8 genera and 26 species
  • Dormice
  • Europe east to central and southern Asia, Africa,
    and southern Japan
  • Small to medium in size
  • Fat or edible dormouse (Myoxis glis) up to 200 g
    considered a delicacy since early Roman times!

29
Myoxidae
Edible or fat dormouse (Myoxis glis)
Yum yum!
30
Myoxidae
Edible or fat dormouse (Myoxis glis)
31
Bathyergidae
  • 5 genera and 12 species
  • All strictly fossorial
  • Sandy soils in the hot, dry regions of Africa
    south of the Sahara Desert
  • African mole rat tunnel over 300 m!
  • Feed on underground bulbs and tubers
  • Some colonial (80 individuals) and others
    solitary

32
Bathyergidae
  • Naked mole rat (Heterocephalous glaber)
  • Bare and wrinkled with only a few tactile hairs
  • Reduced metabolic rate naked body allows easy
    dissipation of body heat
  • Greatest eusocial system!
  • Similar to some insects small workers vs..
    Larger nonworkers

33
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36
Hystricidae
  • 3 genera and 11 species of Old World porcupines
  • Deserts, steppes, forests
  • Africa, Middle East, India, Asia (Indonesia,
    Borneo and the Philippines), Italy (introduced
    1000s of years ago)

37
Hystricidae
  • Quills do not have barbs!
  • Herbivorous, terrestrial, and nocturnal
  • Considered pest throughout much of their range

38
Erethizontidae
  • 4 genera and about 12 species
  • New World porcupines
  • Mixed coniferous forests, tropical forests,
    grasslands and forests
  • SA species have prehensile tails
  • Heavy spines with barbs, works itself in and can
    cause death!

39
Petromuridae
  • Monotypic dassie rat (Petromus typicus)
  • Southern Angola, Namibia, and NW South Africa
  • Small, squirrel-like, with soft, yellow-orange to
    brown fun without underfur
  • Diurnal and feed on plant material coprophagous

40
Thryonomyidae
  • Cane rats or grasscutters
  • South Africa south of the Sahara Desert
  • Chunky body - greater cane rat up to 10 kg
  • Three grooves on anterior surface of incisors
  • Pelage is coarse and bristle like
  • Damage cultivated crops
  • Important food for natives hunted/farmed

41
Thryonomyidae
Thryonomys swinderianus (greater cane rat)
42
Chinchillidae
  • 3 genera - colonial
  • South America - Andes Mountains of Peru south to
    southern Argentina
  • Large heads with large eyes and ears
  • Dense, soft pelage
  • Visachas, chinchillas
  • Hunted for fur - endangered/threatened

43
Dinomyidae
  • Monotypic pacarana (Dinomys branickii)
  • Columbia, Venezuela to Bolivia
  • Look like huge guinea pigs
  • Slow, lumbering, nocturnal herbivores
  • Endangered!

44
Caviidae
  • 5 genera and 15 species
  • Cavies, guinea pigs, and Patagonian hares
  • Throughout SA, but not in the Amazon basin
  • Most have short, robust body form, short limbs
    and ears and a vestigial tail
  • Exception Patagonian hares or maras - long ears
    and long legs - runners!

Dolichotis patagonum (Patagonian mara)
45
Dasyproctidae
  • 11 species of agoutis and 2 species of acouchis
  • Southern Mexico to southern Argentina
  • Diurnal, solitary, burrowing herbivores
  • Hunted for food
  • Acouchis - rain forest - smaller with larger tail

Myoprocta acouchy (green acouchi)
46
Dasyproctidae
So why is the wild color of the Mongolian Gerbil,
and many other animals, often described as
Agouti?
47
Dasyproctidae
  • The word "Agouti" used to describe a coat where
    the shaft of the hairs is one color, usually
    yellow or red, and the tips of the hairs are
    black.
  • Gives animal a brownish gold color that is an
    effective camouflage when hiding in vegetation or
    on a range of soils.
  • In some animals like the Chinchilla and the Grey
    Agouti Gerbil the yellow band is replaced by a
    white one giving a grey color - effective
    camouflage when hiding amongst rocks.

48
Agoutidae
  • 2 species of pacas
  • Central Mexico to Paraguay and Argentina
  • Forested areas from lowlands to high elevations
  • Usually near rivers
  • lt 10 kg

49
Echimyidae
  • Spiny rats - 16 genera and 71 species
  • Honduras to central South America
  • Spiny, stiff, bristle like pelage
  • Ratlike with pointed rostrum
  • Closely tied to water

50
Myocastoridae
  • Coypus or nutria
  • (Myocastor coypus)
  • Chile, Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia
  • Webbed hind feet
  • Sparsely furred tail
  • Fresh or brackish marshes
  • Introduced US EU

51
Lagomorpha
  • hare shaped
  • 11 genera and 54 species in the Family Leporidae
  • 2 genera and 26 species in Family Ochotonidae
  • Worldwide except southern SA Australia New
    Zealand Madagascar Philippines Caribbean
  • Introduced everywhere!

52
Lagomorph Morphology
  • Small to medium-sized
  • Coprophagy is common
  • Reingest hard and soft pellets
  • Live on low quality veg.
  • Diagnostic - peg teeth! A second set of small
    incisors behind the larger, rodent like first
    incisors.
  • A third pair of lateral incisors lost at birth or
    soon after

53
Lagomorph Morphology
  • In leporids, but not in ochotonids, there are
    fenestrations (laticelike penetrations of the
    bone).
  • Rabbits have a cotton-ball tail hare tails are
    longer
  • Pikas are rodent like but have short limbs, small
    ears, and no tail
  • Pikas are agile but cannot run like rabbits

54
Gotta Run!
55
Ochotonidae
56
Easter Bunny
57
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