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Rodent Rodentia is an Order (biology)|order of mammals also known as '''rodents''', characterised by two continuously-growing Incisors#The_Rodent_incisor | incisors in the upper and lower jaws which must be kept short by gnawing.
Forty percent of mammal species are rodents, and they are found in vast numbers on all continents other than Antarctica. Common rodents include Mouse| mice, rats, squirrels, chipmunks, Gopher (animal)| gophers, porcupines, beavers, hamsters, gerbils, guinea pigs, degus, chinchillas, prairie dogs, and groundhogs. Rodents have sharp incisors that they use to gnaw wood, break into food, and bite predators. Most eat seeds or plants, though some have more varied diets. Some species have historically been pests, eating stored human seeds and spreading disease.
Size and range of order
In terms of number of species — although not necessarily in terms of number of organisms (population) or Biomass (ecology)|biomass — rodents make up the largest order of mammals. There are about 2,277 species of rodents (Wilson and Reeder, 2005), with over 40 percent of mammalian species belonging to the order.[ ] Their success is probably due to their small size, short breeding cycle, and ability to gnaw and eat a wide variety of foods. (Lambert, 2000)
Rodents are found in vast numbers on all continents except Antarctica, most islands, and in all habitats except oceans. They are the only Placentalia|placental order, other than bats (Chiroptera) and Pinnipeds, to reach Australia without human introduction.
Characteristics
Many rodents are small; the tiny African pygmy mouse can be only in length and in weight at maturity, and the Baluchistan Pygmy Jerboa is of roughly similar or slightly smaller dimensions. On the other hand, the capybara can weigh up to [Capybaras (Hydrochaeridae): Information and Much More from Answers.com], and the largest known rodent, the extinct ''Josephoartigasia monesi'', is estimated to weigh about , and possibly up to or .
Rodents have two incisors in the upper as well as in the lower jaw which grow continuously and must be kept worn down by gnawing; this is the origin of the name, from the Latin ''rodere'', to gnaw, and ''dens, dentis'', tooth. These teeth are used for cutting wood, biting through the skin of fruit, or for defense. The teeth have tooth enamel|enamel on the outside and exposed dentine on the inside, so they self-sharpen during gnawing. Rodents lack Canine tooth|canines, and have a space between their incisors and premolars. Nearly all rodents feed on plants, seeds in particular, but there are a few exceptions which eat insects or fish. Some squirrels are known to eat passerine birds like cardinal (bird)|cardinals and blue jays.
Rodents are important in many ecosystems because they reproduce rapidly, and can function as food sources for predators, mechanisms for seed dispersal, and as vector (biology)|disease vectors. Humans use rodents as a source of fur, as pets, as model organisms in animal testing, for food, and even for detecting land mine|landmines.[ "A rat with a nose for landmines is doing its bit for humanity" Cited as coming from the New York Times in the article.]
Members of non-rodent orders such as Chiroptera (bats), Scandentia (treeshrews), Insectivora (mole (animal)|moles, shrews and hedgehogs), Lagomorpha (hares, rabbits and pikas) and mustelid Carnivora|carnivores such as weasels and mink are sometimes confused with rodents.
Evolution
The fossil record of rodent-like mammals begins shortly after the extinction of the non-avian dinosaurs 65 million years ago, as early as the Paleocene. Some molecular clock data, however, suggest that modern rodents (members of the order Rodentia) already appeared in the late Cretaceous, although other molecular divergence estimations are in agreement with the fossil record. By the end of the Eocene epoch, relatives of beavers, dormice|dormouse, squirrels, and other groups appeared in the fossil record. They originated in Laurasia, the formerly joined continents of North America, Europe, and Asia. Some species colonized Africa, giving rise to the earliest hystricognaths. There is, however, a minority belief in the scientific community that evidence from mitochondrial DNA indicates that the Hystricognathi may belong to a different evolutionary offshoot and therefore a different order. From there hystricognaths rafted to South America, an isolated continent during the Oligocene and Miocene epochs. By the Miocene, Africa collided with Asia, allowing rodents such as the porcupine to spread into Eurasia. During the Pliocene, rodent fossils appeared in Australia. Even though marsupials are the prominent mammals in Australia, rodents make up almost 25% of the mammals on the continent. Meanwhile, the Americas became joined and some rodents expanded into new territory; mice headed south and porcupines headed north.
Some Prehistoric Rodents
- ''Castoroides'', a giant beaver
- ''Ceratogaulus'', a horned burrowing rodent
- ''Spelaeomys'', a rat that grew to a large size on the island of Flores
- Giant hutias, a group of rodents once found in the West Indies
- ''Ischyromys'', a primitive squirrel-like rodent
- ''Leithia'', a giant dormouse
- ''Neochoerus pinckneyi'', a giant North American Capybara that weighed
- ''Josephoartigasia monesi'', the largest known rodent
- ''Phoberomys pattersoni'', the second largest known rodent
- ''Telicomys'', a giant South American rodent
Classification
Standard classification
The rodents are part of the clades: Glires (along with Lagomorpha|lagomorphs), Euarchontoglires (along with Lagomorpha|lagomorphs, primates, treeshrews, and colugos), and Boreoeutheria (along with most other Eutheria|placental mammals). The order Rodentia may be divided into suborders, infraorders, superfamily|superfamilies and family (biology)|families.
Classification scheme:
ORDER RODENTIA (from Latin, ''rodere,'' to gnaw)
- Suborder Anomaluromorpha - Family Anomaluridae: scaly-tailed squirrels - Family Pedetidae: springhares
- Suborder Castorimorpha - Superfamily Castoroidea - * Family Castoridae: beavers - Superfamily Geomyoidea - *Family Geomyidae: pocket gophers (true gophers) - *Family Heteromyidae: kangaroo rats and kangaroo mouse|kangaroo mice
- Suborder Hystricomorpha - Family ''incertae sedis'' Diatomyidae: Laotian rock rat - Infraorder Ctenodactylomorphi - *Family Ctenodactylidae: gundis - Infraorder Hystricognathi - *Family Bathyergidae: African mole rats - *Family Hystricidae: Old World porcupines - *Family Petromuridae: dassie rat - *Family Thryonomyidae: cane rats - *Parvorder Caviomorpha - **Family †Heptaxodontidae: giant hutias - **Family Abrocomidae: chinchilla rats - **Family Capromyidae: hutias - **Family Caviidae: cavies, including guinea pigs and the capybara - **Family Chinchillidae: chinchillas and viscachas - **Family Ctenomyidae: tuco-tucos - **Family Dasyproctidae: agoutis - **Family Dinomyidae: pacaranas - **Family Echimyidae: spiny rats - **Family Erethizontidae: New World porcupines - **Family Myocastoridae: nutria - **Family Octodontidae: octodonts
- Suborder Myomorpha - Superfamily Dipodoidea - *Family Dipodidae: jerboas and jumping mice - Superfamily Muroidea - *Family Calomyscidae: mouse-like hamsters - *Family Cricetidae: hamsters, New World rats and mice, voles - *Family Muridae: true mouse|mice and rats, gerbils, spiny mice, crested rat - *Family Nesomyidae: climbing mice, rock mice, white-tailed rat, Malagasy rats and mice - *Family Platacanthomyidae: spiny dormice - *Family Spalacidae: mole rats, bamboo rats, and zokors
- Suborder Sciuromorpha - Family Aplodontiidae: mountain beaver - Family Gliridae (also Myoxidae, Muscardinidae): dormouse|dormice - Family Sciuridae: squirrels, including chipmunks, prairie dogs, & marmots
Alternate classifications
The above taxonomy uses the shape of the mandible|lower jaw (Sciurognathi|sciurognath or Hystricognathi|hystricognath) as the primary character. This is the most commonly used approach for dividing the Order (biology)|order into suborders. Many older references emphasize the zygomasseteric system (suborders Protrogomorpha, Sciuromorpha, Hystricomorpha, and Myomorpha).
Several molecular phylogeny|molecular phylogenetic studies have used gene sequences to determine the relationships among rodents, but these studies are yet to produce a single consistent and statistical support|well-supported taxonomy. Some clades have been consistently produced such as:
- Ctenohystrica contains: - Ctenodactylidae (gundis) - Hystricognathi containing: - *Hystricidae - *An unnamed clade containing: - **Phiomorpha - **Caviomorpha
- An unnamed clade contains: - Gliridae - Sciuroidea containing: - *Aplodontiidae - *Sciuridae
- Myodonta includes: - Dipodoidea - Muroidea
The positions of the Castoridae, Geomyoidea, Anomaluridae, and Pedetidae are still being debated.
Monophyly or polyphyly?
In 1991, a paper submitted to Nature magazine|Nature proposed that caviomorpha|caviomorphs should be reclassified as a separate order (similar to Lagomorpha), based on an analysis of the amino acid sequences of guinea pigs.[Graur, D., Hide, W. and Li, W. (1991) 'Is the guinea-pig a rodent?' Nature, 351: 649-652. ] This hypothesis was refined in a 1992 paper, which asserted the possibility that caviomorphs may have diverged from myomorpha|myomorphs prior to later divergences of Myomorpha; this would mean caviomorphs, or possibly hystricomorpha|hystricomorphs, would be moved out of the rodent classification into a separate order.[Li, W., Hide, W., Zharkikh, A., Ma, D. and Graur, D. (1992) 'The molecular taxonomy and evolution of the guinea pig.' Journal of Heredity, 83 (3): 174-81.] A minority scientific opinion briefly emerged arguing that guinea pigs, degus, and other caviomorphs are not rodents,[D'Erchia, A., Gissi, C., Pesole, G., Saccone, C. and Arnason, U. (1996) 'The guinea-pig is not a rodent.' Nature, 381 (6583): 597-600.][Reyes, A., Pesole, G. and Saccone, C. (2000) 'Long-branch attraction phenomenon and the impact of among-site rate variation on rodent phylogeny.' Gene, 259 (1-2): 177-87. ] while several papers were put forward in support of rodent monophyly.[Cao, Y., Adachi, J., Yano, T. and Hasegawa, M. (1994) 'Phylogenetic place of guinea pigs: No support of the rodent-polyphyly hypothesis from maximum-likelihood analyses of multiple protein sequences.' Molecular Biology and Evolution, 11: 593-604.][Kuma, K. and Miyata, T. (1994) 'Mammalian phylogeny inferred from multiple protein data.' Japanese Journal of Genetics, 69 (5): 555-66. ][Robinson-Rechavi, M., Ponger, L. and Mouchiroud, D. (2000) 'Nuclear gene LCAT supports rodent monophyly.' Molecular Biology and Evolution, 17: 1410-1412. ] Subsequent studies published since 2002, using wider taxon and gene samples, have restored consensus among mammalian biologists that the order Rodentia is monophyletic.[Lin, Y-H, et al. "Four new mitochondrial genomes and the increased stability of evolutionary trees of mammals from improved taxon sampling." ''Molecular Biology and Evolution'' '''19''' (2002): 2060-2070.][Carleton, Michael D., and Musser, Guy G. "Order Rodentia". ''Mammal Species of the World'', 3rd edition, 2005, vol. 2, p. 745. (Concise overview of the literature)]
Notes
- Adkins, R. M. E. L. Gelke, D. Rowe, and R. L. Honeycutt. 2001. Molecular phylogeny and divergence time estimates for major rodent groups: Evidence from multiple genes. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 18:777-791.
- Carleton, M. D. and G. G. Musser. 2005. Order Rodentia. Pp 745-752 in Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.
- David Lambert and the Diagram Group. ''The Field Guide to Prehistoric Life.'' New York: Facts on File Publications, 1985. ISBN 0-8160-1125-7
- Jahn, G. C. 1998. “When Birds Sing at Midnight” War Against Rats Newsletter 6:10-11. http://www.cse.csiro.au/research/rodents/rats_newsletters/War6.pdf
- Leung LKP, Peter G. Cox, Gary C. Jahn and Robert Nugent. 2002. Evaluating rodent management with Cambodian rice farmers. Cambodian Journal of Agriculture Vol. 5, pp. 21-26.
- McKenna, Malcolm C., and Bell, Susan K. 1997. ''Classification of Mammals Above the Species Level.'' Columbia University Press, New York, 631 pp. ISBN 0-231-11013-8
- Nowak, R. M. 1999. Walker's Mammals of the World, Vol. 2. Johns Hopkins University Press, London.
- Steppan, S. J., R. A. Adkins, and J. Anderson. 2004. Phylogeny and divergence date estimates of rapid radiations in Muroidea|muroid rodents based on multiple nuclear genes. Systematic Biology, 53:533-553.
- University of California Museum of Paleontology (UCMP). 2007 "Rodentia". http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/mammal/rodentia/rodentia.html
- Wilson, D. E. and D. M. Reeder, eds. 2005. Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.
External links
- Website on African rodentia : http://projects.biodiversity.be/africanrodentia
- Rodent Photos
- Rodent Pests chapter in United States Environmental Protection Agency and University of Florida/Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences National Public Health Pesticide Applicator Training Manual
References
Category:Rodents|
simple:Rodent
Related Images- Typical rodent tooth system
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