TL;DR: The Muroidea include most of the diverse mouse-like rodents living today and include Muridae (true rats and mice), Cricetidae (hamsters, diverse hypsodont groups, and many American lineages), Gerbillidae (gerbils, sand rats and jirds) and several smaller groups, most of which have been given familial rank elsewhere.
Abstract: The Muroidea include most of the diverse mouse-like rodents living today. The extant families of muroid rodents recognized by us are Muridae (true rats and mice), Cricetidae (hamsters, diverse hypsodont groups, and many American lineages), Gerbillidae (gerbils, sand rats and jirds) and several smaller groups, most of which have been given familial rank elsewhere. These are Nesomyidae (including Afrocricetodontinae), Rhizomyidae, Dendromuridae, Petromyscidae, Spalacidae, Cricetomyidae, Platacanthomyidae, and Lophiomyidae. Arvicoline (microtine) genera are not considered to constitute a family because they are late derivatives of advanced cricetids and because they form a polyphyletic group (C. A. Repenning, personal communication).
TL;DR: The combined molecular and craniometric data allowed us to broadly delineate the distribution ranges of the detected species, suggesting that diversifying selection across environmental gradients could be responsible for biological diversification within the genus.
TL;DR: Analysis of historical demography suggests both subspecies of S. campestris experienced population expansion dated to the Last Glacial, and distribution modelling suggests a moderate fragmentation of suitable habitats during the last glacial cycle, whereas in the range of the S. mearnsi group it predicts substantial shifts of its occurrence in the same period.
Abstract: We explore diversity of African pouched mice, genus Saccostomus (Rodentia, Nesomyidae), by sampling molecular and morphological variation across their continental-scale distribution in southern and eastern African savannahs and woodlands. Both mitochondrial (cytochrome b) and nuclear DNA (IRBP, RAG1) as well as skull morphology confirm the distinction between two recognized species, S. campestris and S. mearnsi, with disjunct distribution in the Zambezian and Somali–Maasai bioregions, respectively. Molecular dating suggests the divergence of these taxa occurred in the Early Pliocene, 3.9 Ma before present, whereas the deepest divergences within each of them are only as old as 2.0 Ma for S. mearnsi and 1.4 Ma for S. campestris. Based on cytochrome b phylogeny, we defined five clades (three within S. campestris, two in S. mearnsi) whose species status was considered in the light of nuclear DNA markers and morphology. We conclude that S. campestris group consists of two subspecies S. campestris campestris (Peters, 1846; comprising two cytochrome b clades) and S. campestris mashonae (de Winton, 1897) that are moderately differentiated, albeit distinct in IRBP and skull form. They likely hybridize to a limited extent along the Kafue–Zambezi Rivers. Saccostomus mearnsi group consists of two species, S. mearnsi (Heller, 1910) and S. umbriventer (Miller, 1910), that are markedly differentiated in both nuclear markers and skull form and may possibly co-occur in south-western Kenya and north-eastern Tanzania. Analysis of historical demography suggests both subspecies of S. campestris experienced population expansion dated to the Last Glacial. In the present range of S. campestris group, the distribution modelling suggests a moderate fragmentation of suitable habitats during the last glacial cycle, whereas in the range of S. mearnsi group it predicts substantial shifts of its occurrence in the same period.
TL;DR: It is suggested that the hook‐shaped sperm head in the murid, cricetid, and nesomyid rodents evolved after divergence of this lineage from its common ancestor with the other families of the mouse‐related clade, and that separate, and independent, convergent evolution of a similar sperm head form, and long sperm tail, occurred in the Heteromyidae.
TL;DR: The demonstrated monophyly of both E. antsingy and E. carletoni contributes to the amounting evidence for a biogeographic link between the north and western regions of the island and the role of rivers in their evolution.