Published December 31, 2005 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Leggadina Thomas 1910

Description

Leggadina Thomas 1910

Leggadina Thomas 1910, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 8, 6: 606.

Type Species: Mus forresti Thomas 1906

Species and subspecies: 2 species:

Species Leggadina forresti (Thomas 1906)

Species Leggadina lakedownensis Watts 1976

Discussion: Pseudomys Division. Sometimes included in Pseudomys, but a distinctive genus considered to be an Australian Old Endemic (Musser, 1981 c). Usually included in the Conilurini (Baverstock, 1984), but data from microcomplement fixation of albumin indicated that L. forresti is not closely related to Pseudomys or any of the other Australian Old Endemics (Watts et al., 1992), but clusters with Hydromys (Australia and New Guinea) and the New Guinea endemic Parahydromys (Watts and Baverstock, 1994 a, 1996), an association seemingly supported by spermatozoal morphology (Breed and Aplin, 1994; Breed, 1997). However, a recently completed phylogenetic analysis of multiple mitochondrial and nuclear genes in a wide selection of "conilurines" (in the sense of Baverstock, 1984) shows that Leggadina is much closer to a Pseudomys / Notomys clade than to Hydromys (F. Ford, in litt., 2004). Compared with DNA sequences, especially from a combination of nuclear and mitochondrial genes, the albumin immulogical data, as well as sperm morphology, are apparently unreliable indicators for detecting deep phylogenetic relationships. Leggadina and other members in the Pseudomys Division are part of a larger clade that includes genera in our Hydromys, Xeromys, and Uromys Divisions, an assemblage that Watts and Baverstock (1994 a) defined as Hydromyini (or the "Australasian clade," Watts and Baverstock, 1995 b, 1996) as opposed to a strictly New Guinean Anisomyini (our Pogonomys Division). Some species of Pseudomys, namely P. delicatulus and P. hermannsburgensis, are often included in Leggadina (Lidicker and Brylski, 1987) but only L. forresti and L. lakedownensis belong here (Mahoney and Posamentier, 1975; Mahoney and Richardson, 1988; Watts and Aslin, 1981).

Morphology of male reproductive tract, external anatomy of glans penis, and spermatozoal structure documented in context of comparative study of Australian murines by Breed (1980, 1984, 1986), Morrissey and Breed (1982), and Lidicker and Brylski (1987). Biochemical and chromosomal data discussed by Baverstock et al. (1976 a, 1981, 1983 b). Taxonomic, distributional, and biological references for species catalogued by Mahoney and Richardson (1988). Moro et al. (1998) analysed variation in mtDNA cytochrome b sequences with particular focus on Western Australian populations. Cooper et al. (2003 a) clarified the wider distributions of the two species based on much newly collected material and a combination of allozyme electrophoresis and morphological analysis. Earliest record of Leggadina comes from late Pliocene sediments (Aplin, 2004; Godthelp, 1997).

Notes

Published as part of Wilson, Don E. & Reeder, DeeAnn, 2005, Order Rodentia - Family Muridae, pp. 1189-1531 in Mammal Species of the World: a Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3 rd Edition), Volume 2, Baltimore :The Johns Hopkins University Press on page 1339, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.7316535

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Family
Muridae
Genus
Leggadina
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Rodentia
Phylum
Chordata
Scientific name authorship
Thomas
Taxon rank
genus
Taxonomic concept label
Leggadina Thomas, 1910 sec. Wilson & Reeder, 2005

References

  • Watts, C. H. S. 1976. Leggadina lakedownensis, a new species of murid rodent from North Queensland. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia, 100: 105 - 108.
  • Musser, G. G. 1981 c. The giant rat of Flores and its relatives east of Borneo and Bali. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 169: 67 - 176.
  • Baverstock, P. R. 1984. Australia's living rodents: A restrained explosion. Pp. 913 - 919, in Vertebrate Zoogeography and Evolution in Australasia (M. Archer and G. Clayton, eds.). Hesperian Press, Carlisle, W. A., Australia, 1203 pp.
  • Watts, C. H. S., P. R. Baverstock, J. Birrell, and M. Krieg. 1992. Phylogeny of the Australian rodents (Muridae): A molecular approach using microcomplement fixation of albumin. Australian Journal of Zoology, 40: 81 - 90.
  • Watts, C. H. S., and P. R. Baverstock. 1994 a. Evolution in New Guinean Muridae (Rodentia) assessed by microcomplement fixation of albumin. Australian Journal of Zoology, 42: 295 - 306.
  • Bannikova, A. A., V. A. Dolgov, L. V. Fedorova, A. N. Fedorov, A. V. Troitsky, A. A. Lomov, and B. M. Mednikov. 1996. Taxonomic relationships among hedgehogs of the subfamily Erinaceinae (Mammalia, Insectivora) determined basing on the data of restriction endonuclease analysis of total DNA. Zoologicheskii Zhurnal, 74: 95 - 106.
  • Breed, W. G., and K. P. Aplin. 1994. Sperm morphology of murid rodents from New Guinea and the Solomon Islands: Phylogenetic implications. Australian Journal of Science, 43: 17 - 30.
  • Breed, W. G. 1997. Evolution of the spermatozoon in Australasian rodents. Australian Journal of Zoology, 45: 459 - 478.
  • Watts, C. H. S., and P. R. Baverstock. 1995 b. Evolution in the Murinae (Rodentia) assessed by microcomplement fixation of albumin. Australian Journal of Zoology. 43: 105 - 118.
  • Lidicker, W. Z., Jr., and P. V. Brylski. 1987. The conilurine rodent radiation of Australia, analyzed on the basis of phallic morphology. Journal of Mammalogy, 68: 617 - 641.
  • Mahoney, J. A., and H. Posamentier. 1975. The occurrence of the native rodent Pseudomys gracilicaudatus (Gould, 1845) (Rodentia: Muridae) in New South Wales. Journal of the Australian Mammal Society, 1: 333 - 346.
  • Mahoney, J. A., and B. J. Richardson. 1988. Muridae. Pp. 154 - 192, in Zoological catalogue of Australia. Mammalia (J. L. Bannister, et. al.). Australian Government Publishing Service, Canberra, 5: 1 - 274.
  • Watts, C. H. S., and H. J. Aslin. 1981. The rodents of Australia. Angus and Robertson, Sydney, 321 pp.
  • Breed, W. G. 1980. Further observations on spermatozoal morphology and male reproductive tract anatomy of Pseudomys and Notomys species (Mammalia: Rodentia). Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia, 104: 51 - 55.
  • Breed, W. G. 1984. Sperm head structure in the Hydromyinae (Rodentia: Muridae): A further evolutionary development of the subacrosomal space in mammals. Gamete Research, 10: 31 - 44.
  • Morrissey, B. L., and W. G. Breed. 1982. Variation in external morphology of the glans penis of Australian native rodents. Australian Journal of Zoology, 30: 495 - 502.
  • Baverstock, P. R., J. T. Hogarth, S. Cole, and J. Covacevich. 1976 a. Biochemical and karyotypic evidence for the specific status of the rodent Leggadina lakedownensis Watts. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia, 100: 109 - 112.
  • Nessov, L. A., and A. A. Gureev. 1981. [A jaw of a most ancient shrew from the Upper Cretaceous of the Kizylkum desert.] Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR, 257 (4): 1002 - 1004 (in Russian).
  • Baverstock, P. R., C. H. S. Watts, M. Gelder, and A. Jahnke. 1983 b. G-banding homologies of some Australian rodents. Genetica, 60: 105 - 117.
  • Moro, D., N. J. H. Campbell, M. S. Elphinstone, and P. R. Baverstock. 1998. The Thevenard Island mouse: Historic and conservation implications from mitochondrial DNA sequence-variation. Pacific Conservation Biology, 4: 282 - 288.
  • Cooper, N. K., M. Adams, C. Anthony, and L. H. Schmitt. 2003 a. Morphological and genetic variation in Leggadina (Thomas, 1910) with special reference to Western Australian populations. Records of the Western Australian Museum, 21: 333 - 351.
  • Godthelp, H. J. 1997. Zyzomys rackhami sp. nov. (Rodentia, Muridae) a rockrat from Pliocene Rackham's Roost Site, Riversleigh, northwestern Queensland. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum, 41: 329 - 333.