Zootaxa2011,Issue(3024) :66.

Specific limits and emerging diversity patterns in East African populations of laminate-toothed rats, genus Otomys (Muridae: Murinae: Otomyini): Revision of the Otomys typus complex

PETER J. TAYLOR LEONID A. LAVRENCHENKO MICHAEL D. CARLETON ERIK VERHEYEN NIGEL C. BENNETT CAREL J. OOSTHUIZEN SARITA MAREE
Zootaxa2011,Issue(3024) :66.

Specific limits and emerging diversity patterns in East African populations of laminate-toothed rats, genus Otomys (Muridae: Murinae: Otomyini): Revision of the Otomys typus complex

PETER J. TAYLOR 1LEONID A. LAVRENCHENKO 2MICHAEL D. CARLETON 3ERIK VERHEYEN 4NIGEL C. BENNETT 5CAREL J. OOSTHUIZEN 6SARITA MAREE6
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作者信息

  • 1. Durban Natural Science Museum, P. O. Box 4085, Durban, 4000, Department of Ecology & Resource Management, University of Venda, Private BagX5050, Thohoyandou, 0950, and School of Biological and Conservation Sciences, University ofKwaZulu Natal, South Afric
  • 2. Severtsov Institute ofEcology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, Leninsky pr., 33, Moscow, 119071, Russia
  • 3. Department of Vertebrate Zoology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington,D.C. 20560-0108, USA
  • 4. Vertebrate Department, Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Vautiersstraat 29, 1000 Brussels, Belgium
  • 5. Mammal Research Institute, Department of Zoology and Entomology, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, 0002, South Africa
  • 6. Molecular Ecology and Evolution Programme, Department of Genetics, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, 0002, South Africa
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Abstract

We combined evidence from biogeography, craniodental traits, linear and geometric morphometries (233 skulls), cytogenetics (karyotypes of 18 individuals) and mitochondrial DNA sequences (44 cytochrome b and 21 12S rRNA sequences) to test species limits within Otomys typus s.l. (Muridae: Murinae: Otomyini), a complex that is patchily distributed across alpine zones of Ethiopia and East Africa. Our results confirm the specific validity of O. dartmouthi, O.jacksoni, O. orest-es, and O. uzungwensis, forms recently removed from synonymy under typus s.l.; support elevation of four other alpine forms to species (O.fortior, O. helleri, O. thomasi, and O. zinki); identify three additional new species (O. cheesmani sp. nov., O. simiensis sp. nov., O. yaldenisp. nov.); and enable redefinition of O. typus s.s. as a species restricted to certain mountains west of the Great Rift Valley in Ethiopia (Simien and Guna Mountains in the north, extending to the highlands of the western rim of the Rift Valley). Phylogenetic interpretation of the cytochrome b data clearly demonstrates that the alpine morphotype once united under O. typus s.l. has originated independently at high elevations on several mountain ranges in eastern and northeastern Africa; although generally adapted to high-elevation vegetation, such alpine species are ecologically segregated from one another. Patterns of morphometric, genetic, and ecological differentiation among populations once misassigned to nominal O. tropicalis and O. typus more parsimoniously reflect regional cladogenesis along elevational gradients, rather than multiple, successive colonization by different ancestral forms from southern Africa as earlier supposed. Although incomplete and preliminary, information gathered for O. tropicalis indicates that it too is a species composite; several lines of research are discussed to redress its polyphyletic content. Our results, together with other recent taxonomic studies of Otomys, appreciably elevate the level of endemism within eastern Africa and underscore the significance of Africa's eastern highlands to the continental diversification of Otomyini.

Key words

Otomys/geometric morphometries/cytochrome b/12S rRNA/microendemism/speciation/Afromontane

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出版年

2011
Zootaxa

Zootaxa

SCI
ISSN:1175-5326
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