Undervalued habitat or
impoverished guild? Exploring the scarcity of living semiaquatic
sigmodontine rodents
Ulyses F. J. Pardiñas1* and Erika Cuéllar
Soto2
1Instituto de Diversidad y Evolución Austral
(IDEAus-CONICET), CONICET, Puerto Madryn, Chubut, Argentina & Instituto
Nacional de Biodiversidad (INABIO), Quito, Pichincha, Ecuador.
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9496-5433.
2Department of Biology, College of Science, Sultan
Qaboos University, Muscat, Oman. https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2271-8956.
*Corresponding author: Ulyses F. J. Pardiñas,
ulyses@cenpat-conicet.gob.ar
Abstract. Sigmodontines (Rodentia: Cricetidae), the largest living
radiation of Neotropical rodents (90 genera, 489 species), show about
10% having specializations related to a semiaquatic habitat. In
addition, this mode of life is unequally distributed among the several
clades which compose the subfamily, concentrated in the Ichthyomyini and
in a few large-bodied Oryzomyini. The observed taxonomical and
geographical pattern is here discussed in a biogeographical historical
context. As working hypothesis is advanced that the risk of predation
(exerted by animalivorous fresh-water vertebrates) shaped and limited
since the late Miocene the semiaquatic performance of the subfamily.
Moreover, by exploring the fossil record can also be argued that during
the Pleistocene is registered an important number of amphibious
sigmodontines extinctions. Therefore, the scarcity of living semiaquatic
sigmodontine rodents can be attributed to a combination of an
undervalued habitat (mostly by risk of predation) plus a recent
pauperization (by a sum of biological extinctions) of the members of
that guild. A shallow comparison of the sigmodontine case against murids
suggests that continental waterbodies resulted partially refractory to
muroid colonizations.
Key words: Cricetidae, Ichthyomyini, Oryzomyini, South America, Miocene,
Predation.
Puerto Madryn, July 15, 2023
Editors-in-Chief
Chris Foote, John Wiley & Sons, UK,
cfoote@wiley.com
Dear Dr Foote,
Please find enclosed the manuscript entitled “Undervalued habitat or
impoverished guild? Exploring the scarcity of living semiaquatic
sigmodontine rodents” (authors: Pardiñas and Cuellar). It has been
submitted to your journal for consideration in the category “Nature
Notes.”
This paper gives a supported investigation into why a successful rodent
radiation, the sigmodontines (the biggest Neotropical diversification of
terrestrial mammals), failed to provide an appropriate performance
colonizing fresh-water habitats.
Thank you in advance for your time and help. Kind regards,