Abstract

Evolution of vertebrate endemics in oceanic islands follows a predictable pattern, known as the island rule, according to which gigantism arises in originally small-sized species and dwarfism in large ones. Species of extinct insular giant rodents are known from all over the world. In the Canary Islands, two examples of giant rats, †Canariomys bravoi and †Canariomys tamarani, endemic to Tenerife and Gran Canaria, respectively, disappeared soon after human settlement. The highly derived morphological features of these insular endemic rodents hamper the reconstruction of their evolutionary histories. We have retrieved partial nuclear and mitochondrial data from †C. bravoi and used this information to explore its evolutionary affinities. The resulting dated phylogeny confidently places †C. bravoi within the African grass rat clade (Arvicanthis niloticus). The estimated divergence time, 650 000 years ago (95% higher posterior densities: 373 000–944 000), points toward an island colonization during the Günz–Mindel interglacial stage. †Canariomys bravoi ancestors would have reached the island via passive rafting and then underwent a yearly increase of mean body mass calculated between 0.0015 g and 0.0023 g; this corresponds to fast evolutionary rates (in darwins (d), ranging from 7.09 d to 2.78 d) that are well above those observed for non-insular mammals.

Highlights

  • The Canary Islands are located northwest off the coast of Africa, with their nearest island (Fuerteventura) being only separated from the continent by about 100 km

  • A total of 2627 mapped mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) nucleotides were aligned to a large dataset of rodent mitogenomes and subsequently used for the phylogenetic analysis

  • The resulting dated phylogeny confidently places †C. bravoi within the Arvicanthis genus, in the A. niloticus species complex [30]; it is closely related to a specimen from Masai Mara (Kenya) and is more distinctly related to a specimen belonging to the C2–C4 lineage that is distributed across the Sahel

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Summary

Evolutionary biology

Genetic data from the extinct giant rat from Tenerife (Canary Islands) points to a recent divergence from mainland relatives. Species of extinct insular giant rodents are known from all over the world. In the Canary Islands, two examples of giant rats, †Canariomys bravoi and †Canariomys tamarani, endemic to Tenerife and Gran Canaria, respectively, disappeared soon after human settlement. The highly derived morphological features of these insular endemic rodents hamper the reconstruction of their evolutionary histories. The estimated divergence time, 650 000 years ago (95% higher posterior densities: 373 000– 944 000), points toward an island colonization during the Günz–Mindel interglacial stage. †Canariomys bravoi ancestors would have reached the island via passive rafting and underwent a yearly increase of mean body mass calculated between 0.0015 g and 0.0023 g; this corresponds to fast evolutionary rates (in darwins (d), ranging from 7.09 d to 2.78 d) that are well above those observed for non-insular mammals

Introduction
El Hierro
Miocene late
BLAST reads
Results and discussion
Islands and its relationships with Neogene and
Full Text
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