Ecology and Evolution (Jun 2021)

New karyotype for Mesomys stimulax (Rodentia, Echimyidae) from the Brazilian Amazon: A case for species complex?

  • Stella Miranda Malcher,
  • Julio Cesar Pieczarka,
  • Adenilson Leão Pereira,
  • Paulo José Siqueira do Amaral,
  • Rogério Vieira Rossi,
  • Juliane Saldanha,
  • Cleusa Yoshiko Nagamachi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7583
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 12
pp. 7125 – 7131

Abstract

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Abstract Mesomys Wagner, 1845 (Rodentia, Echimyidae, Eumysopinae) currently has four recognized species, three of which occur in Brazil: Mesomys hispidus (probably a species complex), M. occultus, and M. stimulax. Mesomys leniceps is found in montane forests of northern Peru. Mesomys stimulax, the focus of the present study, has a distribution that is restricted to the central and eastern Amazonia south of the Amazon River, extending from the left bank of the Tapajós River to the right bank of the Tocantins River, and south to the southeast portion of Pará State. The genus presents karyotypes with diploid number 2n = 60 and Fundamental Number (FN) = 116 for M. hispidus and M. stimulax, and 2n = 42, FN = 54 for M. occultus. We studied the karyotype of a female specimen of M. stimulax collected from the Tapirapé‐Aquiri National Forest, Marabá, Pará, Brazil, in the Xingu/Tocantins interfluvium. The obtained karyotype (2n = 60 and FN = 110) differs from that described in the literature for both M. stimulax and M. hispidus by exhibiting more biarmed chromosomes, probably due to pericentric inversions and/or centromeric repositioning, and exhibiting differences in the amount and distribution of constitutive heterochromatin (CH). These results suggest that, similar to what has already been proposed for M. hispidus, M. stimulax may represent a species complex and/or cryptic species. The mechanisms of chromosomal diversification in Mesomys and the biogeographic implications are discussed reinforcing the need for broad systematic review for Mesomys.

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