Published January 25, 2012 | Version v1
Journal article Restricted

Intraspecific versus interspecific variation in Miocene Great Basin mylagaulids: implications for systematics and evolutionary history

Description

Calede, Jonathan J. M., Hopkins, Samantha S. B. (2012): Intraspecific versus interspecific variation in Miocene Great Basin mylagaulids: implications for systematics and evolutionary history. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 164 (2): 427-450, DOI: 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2011.00765.x, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1096-3642.2011.00765.x

Files

Restricted

The record is publicly accessible, but files are restricted to users with access.

Linked records

Additional details

Identifiers

LSID
urn:lsid:plazi.org:pub:FFFAFFD02835FFC0EC654B40691DFFAA
URL
http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFFAFFD02835FFC0EC654B40691DFFAA

References

  • Barnosky AD, Bibi F, Hopkins SSB, Nichols R. 2007. Biostratigraphy and magnetostratigraphy of the mid- Miocene Railroad Canyon sequence, Montana and Idaho, and age of the mid-Tertiary unconformity west of the continental divide. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 27: 204- 224.
  • Barnosky AD, Carrasco MA, Davis EB. 2005. The impact of the species-area relationship on estimates of paleodiversity. PLoS Biology 3: 1356-1361.
  • Black CC, Wood AE. 1956. Variation and tooth-replacement in a Miocene mylagaulid rodent. Journal of Paleontology 30: 672-684.
  • Calede J, Hopkins S. 2012. New material of Alphagaulus pristinus (Mammalia: Rodentia: Mylagaulidae) from the Deep River Formation (Montana, USA): implications for ecology, ontogeny, and phylogeny. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 32 (in press).
  • Carrasco MA, Kraatz BP, Davis EB, Barnosky AD. 2005. Miocene Mammal Mapping Project (MIOMAP), University of California Museum of Paleontology. Available at: http:// www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/neomap/search.html
  • Carraway LN, Verts BJ. 1993. Aplodontia rufa. Mammalian Species 431: 1-10.
  • Cook HJ, Gregory JT. 1941. Mesogaulus praecursor, a new rodent from the Miocene of Nebraska. Journal of Paleontology 15: 549-552.
  • Cope ED. 1878. Descriptions of new extinct Vertebrata from the upper Tertiary and Dakota formations. Bulletin of the United States Geological and Geographic Survey of the Territories 4: 379-396.
  • Cope ED. 1881. Review of the Rodentia of the Miocene period of North America. Bulletin of the United States Geological and Geographic Survey of the Territories 6: 361-386.
  • Douglass E. 1903. Vertebrates from Montana Tertiary. Annals of the Carnegie Museum 2: 145-199.
  • Downs T. 1956. The Mascall fauna from the Miocene of Oregon. University of California Publications in Geological Sciences 31: 199-354.
  • Fagan SR. 1960. Osteology of Mylagaulus laevis, a fossorial rodent from the upper Miocene of Colorado. The University of Kansas Paleontological Contributions Paper 9: 1-32.
  • Farooqui SM, Beaulieu JD, Bunker RC, Stensland DE, Thoms DE. 1981. Dalles Group: Neogene formations overlying the Columbia River Basalt Group in north-central Oregon. Oregon Geology 43: 131-140.
  • Feranec RS, Barnosky AD, Quang CN. 2005. New populations and biogeographic patterns of the geomyid rodents Lignimus and Mojavemys from the Barstovian of Western Montana. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 25: 962- 975.
  • Gazin CL. 1932. A Miocene mammalian fauna from southeastern Oregon. Carnegie Institution of Washington Publication 418: 37-86, plates 1-6.
  • Gidley JW. 1907. A new horned rodent from the Miocene of Kansas. Proceedings of the United States National Museum 32: 627-636.
  • Hall ER. 1930. Rodents and lagomorphs from the later Tertiary of Fish Lake Valley, Nevada. University of California Publications, Bulletin of the Department of Geology 19: 295-312, plate 1.
  • Hibbard CW, Phillis LF. 1945. The occurrence of Eucastor and Epigaulus in the lower Pliocene of Trego County, Kansas. University of Kansas Science Bulletin 30: 549- 555.
  • Hopkins SSB. 2005. The evolution of fossoriality and the adaptative role of horns in the Mylagaulidae (Mammalia: Rodentia). Proceedings of the Royal Society B 272: 1705- 1713.
  • Hopkins SSB. 2006. Morphology of the skull in Meniscomys from the John Day Formation of central Oregon. PaleoBios New Series 26: 1-9.
  • Hopkins SSB. 2007. Causes of lineage decline in the Aplodontidae: Testing for the influence of physical and biological change. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 246: 331-353.
  • Hopkins SSB. 2008. Phylogeny and evolutionary history of the Aplodontoidea (Mammalia: Rodentia). Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 153: 769-838.
  • Kay RF, Kirk F. 2000. Osteological evidence for the evolution of activity pattern and visual acuity in Primates. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 113: 235-262.
  • Kellogg L. 1910. Rodent fauna of the late Tertiary beds at Virgin Valley and Thousand Creek, Nevada. University of California Publications, Bulletin of the Department of Geology 5: 421-437.
  • Korth WW. 1999. Hesperogaulus, a new genus of mylagaulid rodent (Mammalia) from the Miocene (Barstovian to Hemphillian) of the Great Basin. Journal of Paleontology 73: 945-951.
  • Korth WW. 2000. Review of Miocene (Hemingfordian to Clarendonian) mylagaulid rodents (Mammalia) from Nebraska. Annals of Carnegie Museum 69: 227-280.
  • MacDonald JR. 1956. A new Clarendonian mammalian fauna from the Truckee Formation of western Nevada. Journal of Paleontology 30: 186-202.
  • Markova E, Malygin V, Montuire S, Nadachowski A, Quere JP, Ochman K. 2010. Dental variation in sibling species Microtus arvalis and M. rossiaemeridionalis (Arvicolinae, Rodentia): between-species comparisons and geography of morphotype dental patterns. Journal of Mammalian Evolution 17: 121-139.
  • Matthew WD. 1902. A horned rodent from the Colorado Miocene, with a revision of the Mylagauli, beavers and hares of the American Tertiary. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 16: 291-310.
  • Matthew WD. 1924. Third contribution to the Snake Creek Fauna. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 50: 59-210.
  • McGrew PO. 1941. The Aplodontoidea. Geological Series, Field Museum of Natural History 9: 1-30.
  • McGuire JL. 2010. Geometric morphometrics of vole (Microtus californicus) dentition as a new paleoclimate proxy: shape change along geographic and climatic clines. Quaternary International 212: 198-205.
  • Morea MF. 1981. The Massacre Lake local fauna (Mammalia, Hemingfordian) from northwestern Washoe County, Nevada. Unpublished D. Phil. Dissertation, Riverside, University of California, CA, USA.
  • Munthe J. 1988. Miocene mammals of the Split Rock area, Granite Mountains Basin, Central Wyoming. University of California Publications Geological Sciences 126: 1-136.
  • Newcomb RC. 1971. Relation of the Ellensburg Formation to extensions of the Dalles Formation in the area of Arlington and Shutler flat, north central Oregon. The Ore Bin 33: 133-143.
  • Scharf DW. 1935. A Miocene mammalian fauna from Sucker Creek, southeastern Oregon. Carnegie Institution of Washington Publication 453: 97-118, plates 1-2.
  • Shotwell JA. 1956. Hemphillian mammalian assemblage from northeastern Oregon. Bulletin of the Geological Society of America 67: 717-738.
  • Shotwell JA. 1958. Evolution and biogeography of the aplodontid and mylagaulid rodents. Evolution 12: 451-484.
  • Shotwell JA. 1963. The Juntura Basin: studies in earth history and paleoecology. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 53: 1-77.
  • Smith GA. 1986. Simtustus Formation: palaeogeographic and stratigraphic significance of a newly defined unit in the Deschutes basin, central Oregon. Oregon Geology 48: 63-72.
  • Sutton JF, Korth WW. 1995. Rodents (Mammalia) from the Barstovian (Miocene) Anceney Local Fauna, Montana. Annals of Carnegie Museum 64: 267-314.
  • Tedford RH, Albright LB III, Barnosky AD, Ferrusquia- Villafranca I, Hunt RM Jr, Storer JE, Swisher CC III, Voorhies MF, Webb SD, Whistler DP. 2004. Mammalian biochronology of the Arikareean through Hemphillian Interval (Late Oligocene through early Pliocene epochs). In: Woodburne MO, ed. Late Cretaceous and Cenozoic mammals of North America: biostratigraphy and geochronology. New York: Columbia University Press, 169-231.
  • Wagner H. 1976. A new species of Pliotaxidea (Mustelidae: Carnivora) from California. Journal of Paleontology 50: 107-127.
  • Wahlert JH. 1974. The cranial foramina of protrogomorphous rodents; an anatomical and phylogenetic study. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology 146: 363-410.
  • Wallace RE. 1946. A Miocene mammalian fauna from Beatty Buttes, Oregon. Carnegie Institution of Washington Publication 551: 113-134, plates 1-6.
  • Wilson RW. 1937. New middle Pliocene rodent and lagomorph faunas from Oregon and California. Carnegie Institution of Washington Publication 487: 1-19, plates 1-3.