Striped mouse

Striped mouse

Striped mouse (Rhabdomys pumilio) on the cover of the August edition of Behaviour

Striped mouse (Rhabdomys pumilio) on the cover of the August edition of Behaviour
My photo and the accompanying paper (see List of publications) were published in this issue.

Wednesday, March 29, 2017

A little bit backwards … and what’s to come ahead?



Okay, so now you know all about my students. How about a little more about myself?
Since the start of 2016 and the present time, I have published 6 papers, and I have one currently under review:
Fig. 1. African striped mouse Rhabdomys dilectus chakae. Photo: P. Stanley; http://bit.ly/2oasJGo

  • One is a review paper. Using a theoretical framework, we explore how we can estimate a species’ resilience and vulnerability to drought.
  • One paper is currently under review. This paper has been submitted to the journal Mammalian Species, and includes a taxonomic description and life history characteristics of the fawn-footed mosaic-tailed rat Melomys cervinipes (Fig. 4). Watch this space!
Fig. 3. African ice rat Otomys sloggetti robertsi. Photo: P. Venter; http://bit.ly/2ojAqaI
I have developed more of an interest in animal personality and emotion over the last few years, particularly as fawn-footed mosaic-tailed rats come from extremely complex rainforest environments, which could have significant effects on their behaviour and cognition. I am also interested in exploring olfactory discrimination in more detail in this species, largely because we have little understanding of this. 

With the aid of my students, my work on fawn-footed mosaic-tailed rats has shown that at least one population has a behavioural syndrome that can be plotted along the bold-shy axis. We have also found some evidence of decoupling of personality traits along the calm-anxious and bold-shy axes. We’ve tested hormone concentrations, and correlated them with behaviours, but interestingly, physiological attributes only really become correlated in stressful situations. This was something that I predicted based on my honours student's, Emma Delarue, work.
Fig. 4. Fawn-footed mosaic-tailed rat. Photo: T. Rymer

Together with a colleague, Dr David Wilson from the Australian Institute for Tropical Health and Medicine, we are investigating fawn-footed mosaic-tailed rats response to odour cues from mygalomorph spiders. Preliminary results, which we presented at the Australasian Mammal Society conference in Alice Springs, Northern Territory, in 2016 suggest that they can discriminate cues, but not quite in the manner predicted. This is quite exciting for us, as this is the first study to test this in this species. We are currently gathering more data and a larger sample size to support our findings.

My masters student, Kelsey Paulling, is taking the next step with olfactory discrimination studies, using cues from reptiles. Hopefully, we can extend the data set to explore a range of possibilities, but, as the project is early stages at the moment, we are still ironing out methods. We have run a single test, using Pirate, one of the lab favourites, who is quite a charismatic and charming little mouse. Given Pirate’s bold personality, it was hardly surprising that he attempted to eat the sample. Hopefully, we’ll have some more definitive results in the next 6 months.

Because I'm a little rodent-minded, in my next blog, I'll introduce you to the first of the rodent species that captured my research interest (and my heart). You can read more about my research on rodents in my publications, listed on my blog. You can also find me on ResearchGate or the James Cook University website.