Cranial variation in allactagine jerboas (Allactaginae, Dipodidae, Rodentia): a geometric morphometric study

Allactaginae is a subfamily of dipodids consisting of four- and five-toed jerboas (Allactaga, Allactodipus, Orientallactaga, Pygeretmus, Scarturus) found in open habitats of Asia and North Africa. Recent molecular phylogenies have upended our understanding of this group’s systematics across taxonomi...

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Main Author: Bader H. Alhajeri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Science Press, PR China 2021-03-01
Series:Zoological Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.zoores.ac.cn/EN/10.24272/j.issn.2095-8137.2020.302
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spelling doaj-8b866f9731d54a269449213094da17e82021-04-15T06:17:59ZengScience Press, PR ChinaZoological Research2095-81372021-03-0142218219410.24272/j.issn.2095-8137.2020.302ZR-2020-302Cranial variation in allactagine jerboas (Allactaginae, Dipodidae, Rodentia): a geometric morphometric studyBader H. Alhajeri0Department of Biological Sciences, Kuwait University, Safat 13060, KuwaitAllactaginae is a subfamily of dipodids consisting of four- and five-toed jerboas (Allactaga, Allactodipus, Orientallactaga, Pygeretmus, Scarturus) found in open habitats of Asia and North Africa. Recent molecular phylogenies have upended our understanding of this group’s systematics across taxonomic scales. Here, I used cranial geometric morphometrics to examine variation across 219 specimens of 14 allactagine species (Allactaga major, A. severtzovi, Orientallactaga balikunica, O. bullata, O. sibirica, Pygeretmus platyurus, P. pumilio, P. shitkovi, Scarturus aralychensis, S. euphraticus, S. hotsoni, S. indicus, S. tetradactylus, S. williamsi) in light of their revised taxonomy. Results showed no significant sexual size or shape dimorphism. Species significantly differed in cranial size and shape both overall and as species pairs. Species identity had a strong effect on both cranial size and shape. Only a small part of cranial shape variation was allometric, with no evidence of unique species allometries, and most specimens fit closely to the common allometric regression vector. Allactaga was the largest, followed by Orientallactaga, Scarturus, and finally Pygeretmus. Principal component 1 (PC1) separated O. bullata+O. balikunica+S. hotsoni (with inflated bullae along with reduced zygomatic arches and rostra) from A. major+A. severtzovi+O. sibirica (with converse patterns), while PC2 differentiated Orientallactaga (with enlarged cranial bases and rostra along with reduced zygomatic arches and foramina magna) from Scarturus+Pygeretmus (with the opposite patterns). Clustering based on the unweighted pair group method with arithmetic mean (UPGMA) contained the four genera, but S. hotsoni clustered with O. bullata+O. balikunica and O. sibirica clustered with A. major+A. severtzovi, likely due to convergence and allometry, respectively.http://www.zoores.ac.cn/EN/10.24272/j.issn.2095-8137.2020.302allactagacranial morphometricsfive-toed jerboasorientallactagapygeretmusscarturus
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bader H. Alhajeri
spellingShingle Bader H. Alhajeri
Cranial variation in allactagine jerboas (Allactaginae, Dipodidae, Rodentia): a geometric morphometric study
Zoological Research
allactaga
cranial morphometrics
five-toed jerboas
orientallactaga
pygeretmus
scarturus
author_facet Bader H. Alhajeri
author_sort Bader H. Alhajeri
title Cranial variation in allactagine jerboas (Allactaginae, Dipodidae, Rodentia): a geometric morphometric study
title_short Cranial variation in allactagine jerboas (Allactaginae, Dipodidae, Rodentia): a geometric morphometric study
title_full Cranial variation in allactagine jerboas (Allactaginae, Dipodidae, Rodentia): a geometric morphometric study
title_fullStr Cranial variation in allactagine jerboas (Allactaginae, Dipodidae, Rodentia): a geometric morphometric study
title_full_unstemmed Cranial variation in allactagine jerboas (Allactaginae, Dipodidae, Rodentia): a geometric morphometric study
title_sort cranial variation in allactagine jerboas (allactaginae, dipodidae, rodentia): a geometric morphometric study
publisher Science Press, PR China
series Zoological Research
issn 2095-8137
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Allactaginae is a subfamily of dipodids consisting of four- and five-toed jerboas (Allactaga, Allactodipus, Orientallactaga, Pygeretmus, Scarturus) found in open habitats of Asia and North Africa. Recent molecular phylogenies have upended our understanding of this group’s systematics across taxonomic scales. Here, I used cranial geometric morphometrics to examine variation across 219 specimens of 14 allactagine species (Allactaga major, A. severtzovi, Orientallactaga balikunica, O. bullata, O. sibirica, Pygeretmus platyurus, P. pumilio, P. shitkovi, Scarturus aralychensis, S. euphraticus, S. hotsoni, S. indicus, S. tetradactylus, S. williamsi) in light of their revised taxonomy. Results showed no significant sexual size or shape dimorphism. Species significantly differed in cranial size and shape both overall and as species pairs. Species identity had a strong effect on both cranial size and shape. Only a small part of cranial shape variation was allometric, with no evidence of unique species allometries, and most specimens fit closely to the common allometric regression vector. Allactaga was the largest, followed by Orientallactaga, Scarturus, and finally Pygeretmus. Principal component 1 (PC1) separated O. bullata+O. balikunica+S. hotsoni (with inflated bullae along with reduced zygomatic arches and rostra) from A. major+A. severtzovi+O. sibirica (with converse patterns), while PC2 differentiated Orientallactaga (with enlarged cranial bases and rostra along with reduced zygomatic arches and foramina magna) from Scarturus+Pygeretmus (with the opposite patterns). Clustering based on the unweighted pair group method with arithmetic mean (UPGMA) contained the four genera, but S. hotsoni clustered with O. bullata+O. balikunica and O. sibirica clustered with A. major+A. severtzovi, likely due to convergence and allometry, respectively.
topic allactaga
cranial morphometrics
five-toed jerboas
orientallactaga
pygeretmus
scarturus
url http://www.zoores.ac.cn/EN/10.24272/j.issn.2095-8137.2020.302
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