Abstract

Jirds (genus Meriones) are a diverse group of rodents, with a wide distribution range in Iran. Sundevall’s jird (Meriones crassus Sundevall, 1842) is one such species that shows a disjunct distribution, found on the Iranian Plateau and Western Zagros Mountains. Morphological differences observed between these two populations, however, lack quantitative support. Morphological differences between geographical populations of Meriones crassus were analysed and compared with those of the sympatric M. libycus. Similarities in the cranial morphology of these species were found, e.g. in a relatively large and inflated bulla. A two-dimensional geometric morphometric analysis was done on the skull of 275 M. crassus and 220 M. libycus from more than 70 different localities in their distribution range. Results confirm cranial differences between specimens of M. crassus from the Western Zagros and those from Africa and Arabia, mainly at the level of the relative size of the tympanic bulla, that were significantly correlated with the annual rainfall and elevation. Moreover, the study supports the hypothesis that the Western Zagros specimens are both a geographically and phenotypically distinct group compared to the other Iranian M. crassus specimens, suggesting that the former might be a distinct species.

Highlights

  • Jirds, belonging to the genus Meriones Illiger, 1811 (Rodentia, Gerbillinae), are a diverse group of murid rodents that are distributed from North Africa to China, with 17 recognized species

  • This study aimed to evaluate whether (1) specimens of M. crassus from the Western Zagros considered as M. crassus charon (Ellerman 1948; Harrison 1956; Hatt 1959) can be distinguished from those specimens distributed across the Iranian Plateau, as well as from M. crassus specimens that originated from other parts of the species’ distribution range; (2) morphological differences between the Western Zagros M. crassus and a cluster containing the other M. crassus populations are at a similar level as that observed at the inter-specific level; (3) cranial variation in Sundevall and Libyan jirds reveals different patterns in relation to geoclimatic variation, and (4) the cranial differences are correlated with the geoclimatic variables

  • For the RW2 scores, the Western Zagros specimens are within the upper range of the M. crassus scores for the dorsal view, but not for the ventral and the lateral views

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Summary

Introduction

Jirds, belonging to the genus Meriones Illiger, 1811 (Rodentia, Gerbillinae), are a diverse group of murid rodents that are distributed from North Africa to China, with 17 recognized species. Jird (Meriones crassus Sundevall, 1842) and Libyan jird (M. libycus Lichtenstein, 1823) are known to show both similarities in their morphological features and their distribution, with the Middle East and the Iranian Plateau being a biogeographically important part of their distribution range (Misonne 1959, 1975; Firouz 2005). Iran and the Iranian Plateau are of considerable zoogeographical interest within the Palearctic region because of their great biodiversity (Anderson 1989). Across their distribution range, Sundevall’s jirds live in diverse habitats and geoclimatic conditions. Since the level of interspecific morphological differences in jirds is poorly understood, M. crassus is compared with its closest congener, M. libycus

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