4.2 Article

Forelimb morphology as an adaptation for burrowing in kangaroo rat species (genus Dipodomys) that inhabit different soil substrates

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JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY
卷 -, 期 -, 页码 -

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OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jmammal/gyad092

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Dipodomys; forelimb morphology; geometric morphometrics; kangaroo rat; soil substrate

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Among burrowing rodents, the forelimb morphology is closely related to soil substrates. Kangaroo rats that inhabit dense soils display specialized forelimb traits, which limit their geographic range. Understanding the role of soil specialization in habitat occupancy is crucial for conservation decisions.
Among burrowing rodents, forelimb morphology frequently shares an intricate relationship with soil substrates. Soils vary widely in texture and density, leading to differences in friability (e.g., the relative ability of particles to be broken apart), which often requires forelimb specializations in digging animals. Kangaroo rats (Dipodomys spp.) dig and occupy burrows, a trait that is essential to their survival. Some Dipodomys species are restricted to particular substrates that presumably require species-specific forelimb traits. Here we examined the forelimb morphology and soil substrates inhabited by range-restricted and widely ranging Dipodomys species to explore the variation in soil usage, forelimb specializations, and the relationship between these traits. We assessed size and shape traits of preserved specimen forelimb bones using traditional and geometric morphometric techniques and extracted soil data associated with the collecting locality of each specimen. We expected species that inhabit dense soil substrates to display specialized forelimb morphology typified by an elongated scapula and robust humerus, radius, and ulna. The species differed substantially in their soil associations and forelimb morphologies. In particular, forelimb traits that enhance mechanical digging ability were detected in D. elator, a range-restricted species that inhabits dense clay-rich soils. These findings suggest that Dipodomys species that inhabit dense substrates may require correspondingly specialized forelimb morphology and that these traits may limit the desirable geographic ranges inhabited by these species. This may provide important information when making conservation decisions given that unlike other habitat features, soil substrates cannot be easily modified to suit the needs of the organism. Kangaroo rat species display morphological variation associated with their forelimbs. Species that construct burrows in dense soils have correspondingly robust forelimb features, which suggests that these animals are morphologically specialized to their substrate and may help to explain their limited geographic range. Appreciating the role of soil specialization in habitat occupancy may provide important information as conservation decisions are made on behalf of these animals.

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