SPERM MORPHOLOGY OF MURID RODENTS FROM NEW-GUINEA AND THE SOLOMON-ISLANDS - PHYLOGENETIC IMPLICATIONS

Authors
Citation
Wg. Breed et Kp. Aplin, SPERM MORPHOLOGY OF MURID RODENTS FROM NEW-GUINEA AND THE SOLOMON-ISLANDS - PHYLOGENETIC IMPLICATIONS, Australian journal of zoology, 43(1), 1995, pp. 17-30
Citations number
46
Categorie Soggetti
Zoology
ISSN journal
0004959X
Volume
43
Issue
1
Year of publication
1995
Pages
17 - 30
Database
ISI
SICI code
0004-959X(1995)43:1<17:SMOMRF>2.0.ZU;2-8
Abstract
Observations on sperm morphology from most species of murid rodents fr om New Guinea and the Solomon Islands, based on light microscopy, are presented. Transmission electron microscopy of spermatozoa for three s pecies in two genera are also given. All Rattus species, Melomys lanos us, M. rattoides, Lorentzimys nouhuysi and Coccymys ruemmleri have sic kle-shaped sperm heads and long sperm tails. In contrast, most of the other species have sperm with a broader lateral face and three ventral processes. These processes vary somewhat in size and shape, and in tw o Pogonomys and one Chiruromys species there is an extension of the nu cleus into the most caudal of the three processes. Species of Anisomys and Hyomys have a sperm head with a broad lateral face but with only a single apical process. Abeomelomys sevia and Solomys salebrosus each have a distinct sperm head morphology unlike that of any other Austra lian murid; the latter species also has an extremely short sperm tail. Taxonomic and phylogenetic inferences are drawn from these data. Some of the phylogenetic conclusions are markedly divergent from tradition al views, which are based on craniodental anatomy.