3.8 Article

Evolution toward asymmetrical gaits in Neotropical spiny rats (Rodentia: Echimyidae):: Evidences favoring adaptation

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CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING, NRC RESEARCH PRESS
DOI: 10.1139/Z07-049

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The torch tail rat, Trinomys yonenagae Rocha, 1995 (family Echimyidae), is the morphologically most divergent of the spiny rats. In this study, we evaluate the hypothesis that gaits preferentially used by this species evolved as an adaptation to the desert-like dunes where they live. We filmed spontaneous locomotion of T. yonenagae, Trinomys albispinus minor Reis and Pessoa, 1995, and Proechimys cayennensis (Desmarest, 1817) with a high-speed camera. We detected, for each of the 323 cycles of the reference forelimb recorded, the kind of gait developed, the time lags between the touchdown of each pair of limbs, and the relative velocity. Trinomys yonenagae walked twice as fast as P. cayennensis and T a. minor using mainly the asymmetrical transverse gallop, half-bounds, and bounds, while the other two species used mainly the lateral sequence walk. Gaits changed from symmetrical to asymmetrical with increasing velocity for T yonenagae but not for the other species. We argue that the gait pattern found in T yonenagae is autapomorphic, that its origin coincides with the shift to a desert-like habitat, and that this type of gait confers higher adaptive value to explore resources in open areas than the plesiomorphic pattern. Therefore, we conclude that it can be considered adaptive to life in the dunes.

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