Abstract

Although much information on the species dynamics of small mammals may be gleaned from the integration of morphological and molecular data sets, the two are not routinely combined when species boundaries and definitions are investigated. The greater Japanese shrew-mole (Urotrichus talpoides) presents a rare example of intraspecific and geographical euchromatic chromosomal variation. In this study a combination of 2D landmark-based and outline-based geometric morphometric methods were used to provide the first quantitative examination of variation in skull morphology occurring between populations of U. talpoides. Geographic variation was found to be most conspicuous in ventral and dorsal cranial morphology, and less evident for outline-based analyses of the dentary, thereby indicating differing magnitudes of skeletal plasticity associated with geographic variation in each system. Both ventral and dorsal cranial morphology differed significantly between shrew-moles from western and eastern Honshu, in agreement with previously identified chromosomal variation boundaries. Inclusion of other island populations revealed shape differences between shrew-moles in Kyushu, Tsushima and North Honshu. These results lend general support for the unification of morphological and chromosomal data when assessing species boundaries.

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