Abstract

A total of 219 wild caught specimens representing 12 of the currently recognised 13 species and subspecies of Australian Rattus have been karyotyped. No two species possessed karyotypes in common, most species and several subspecies differing markedly in chromosome number. While the diploid number varied from 2n=32 to 2n=50, the fundamental number (FN) varied only from 60 to 62, suggesting that Robertsonian rearrangements have played a major role in karyotypic evolution in the group. — Karyotypically the Australian species of Rattus fall into two groups. — the R. lutreolus group and the R. sordidus group. Of the karyotypic forms encountered in the former group, that of R. lutreolus is probably most ancestral because it is identical to that of many Asian species of Rattus. Other karyotypic forms in the R. lutreolus group can be derived as follows: That of (1) R. tunneyi tunneyi and R. t. culmorum by a single fixed pericentric inversion; (2) R. fuscipes fuscipes, R. f. greyi, R. f. assimilis and R. f. coracius by two fixed fusions; (3) R. leucopus cooktownensis by three fixed fusions; and (4) R. leucopus leucopus by four fixed fusions. Of the R. sordidus group, R. s. villosissimus may possess the most ancestral karyotype with 2n=50 (FN=60), from which R. s. colletti (2n=42; FN=60) is derived by four fusions and R. s. sordidus (2n=32; FN=60) by nine fusions, four of which appear to be homologous with those R. s. colletti. — The karyotypic data are in accord with Taylor and Horner's (1973) suggestions that (1) R. t. tunneyi and R. t. culmorum belong to one species; (2) R. lut. lutreolus and R. lut. velutinus belong to one species; (3) R. leu. leucopus and R. leu. cooktownensis belong to one species and (4) R. f. fuscipes, R. f. greyi, R. f. assimilis and R. f. coracius belong to one species. However, the large karyotypic difference between R. s. sordidus and R. s. colletti and R. s. villosissimus may indicate that these groups belong to different biological species. — Supernumerary or B-chromosomes were found in R. f. assimilis and R. t. tunneyi. A single R. t. culmorum was heterozygous for a centric fusion.

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