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1 October 2016 Temporal Changes in Cranial Size in South African Vlei Rats (Otomys): Evidence for the ‘Third Universal Response to Warming’
Aluwani Nengovhela, Roderick M Baxter, Peter J Taylor
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Abstract

Using museum collections and recently collected specimens we studied geographical and temporal (from 1906 to 2013) changes in skull size of two sibling species of rodents, Otomys auratus and O. angoniensis, in northern South Africa occupying distinct temperate grassland (O. auratus) and subtropical savanna (O. angoniensis) biomes. We hypothesised that cranial size should vary in space and time within species according to Bergmann's Rule, which predicts an inverse relationship between body size and temperature. We used the greatest length of the skull (GLS) as a robust indicator of body size. Cranial size of both O. auratus and O. angoniensis decreased significantly over the past 100 years, as expected given historical evidence of warming across northern South Africa since the 1950s. In terms of geographical patterns, GLS was inversely correlated with both latitude and longitude in O. auratus but these trends were correlated with annual rainfall rather than mean annual temperature. Conversely, cranial size of O. angoniensis was weakly positively correlated with longitude but with no climatic variables. Our results demonstrate rapid morphological changes in two herbivorous South African rodents over the past 100 years. Whilst the general decline in size with time in relation to increased temperature is consistent with Bergmann's Rule, multiple drivers may underlie geographical trends in the two species.

© Zoological Society of Southern Africa
Aluwani Nengovhela, Roderick M Baxter, and Peter J Taylor "Temporal Changes in Cranial Size in South African Vlei Rats (Otomys): Evidence for the ‘Third Universal Response to Warming’," African Zoology 50(3), 233-239, (1 October 2016). https://doi.org/10.1080/15627020.2015.1052014
Received: 16 January 2015; Accepted: 1 May 2015; Published: 1 October 2016
KEYWORDS
Bergmann's rule
body size
climate change
Morphometric variation
Muridae
South Africa
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