Fig. 1. Me and Duff at Kewarra Beach |
Moving swiftly into August and Blog 8, it’s hard to
believe that we’ve made it this far into 2019! I am back in sunny Cairns (Figure
1), which is quite a change from the bustling metropolis of Chicago. I’m going
to continue with our discussion on the native Australian fawn-footed mosaic-tailed rat Melomys cervinipes
(Figure 2), still keeping the focus quite general at this point.
Fig. 2. Fawn-footed mosaic-tailed rat M. cervinipes |
I didn’t mention this in the last blog, but I thought I
should just quickly enlighten you all as to what being a murid actually means. To
start with, murids fall into the sub-order Myomopha. To distinguish this
sub-order from the Sciuromorpha (squirrels and relatives) and the
Hystricomorpha (porcupines and relatives), we look at the zygomasseteric system
– basically, the muscles in the face. In Myomorphs, the medial and lateral
masseter muscles are displaced forward, and the medial masseter muscle passes
through the eye socket (Figure 3).
Fig. 3. Myomorph skull (http://users.tamuk.edu) |
The Muridae is a family of rodents. It is the largest
family, with typical representatives being mice, rats, jirds and gerbils
(Figure 4). Again, we can use the skull to distinguish murids from other
rodents. Specifically, murids have an enlarged infraorbital foramen that has a
keyhole shape. They have a broad zygomatic plate, and lack a postorbital
process. The maxilla and mandible each house a pair of unrooted incisors and no
premolars. In the mandible, the angular process and the incisors begin in the
same area.
Fig. 4. Mongolian gerbil Meriones unguiculatus (Photo: Alastair Rae) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Meriones_unguiculatus_(wild).jpg |
The first definitive recording of a member of the genus Melomys occurs in the fossil record of
the late Pleistocene, around 33000 – 15450 years old. These fossils were found
in the Pyramids cave about 6.5km north east of Buchan, Victoria. Fawn-footed
mosaic-tailed rats are endemic to Australia, and can be found in the coastal
and subcoastal regions from northern New South Wales to Queensland (Figure 5).
It has been recorded at locations at sea level, as well as Mount Elliot
(1221m.a.s.l), and even all the way to 1600m.
Fig. 5. Distribution of M. cervinipes (Callaway et al. 2018) |
Fig. 6. M. cervinipes skull (Photo: David Wilson; Callaway et al. 2018) |
If we take a closer look at the form and function of
fawn-footed mosaic-tailed rats, the skull (Figure 6) is typical murid, bearing
a pair of incisors, no canines or premolars and three pairs of molars on each
of the upper and lower jaws, a total of 16 teeth in total. The incisors are
opisthodont. The first and second pair of molars shows four distinctive roots,
while the third pair of molars show three roots. The alveolar length of the
first molar ranges from 3.1-3.7mm.
In the next blog, I’ll continue talking about
mosaic-tailed rats.
You can read more about my research in my publications,
listed on my blog. You can also find me on ResearchGate, the James Cook University website and Twitter.
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