首页> 外文期刊>Palaios: An International Journal of the Society of Economic Paleontologists & Mineralogists >EXCEPTIONALLY WELL PRESERVED LATEST MIOCENE (HEMPHILLIAN) RODENT BURROWS FROM THE EASTERN GREAT PLAINS, UNITED STATES, AND A REVIEW OF THE BURROWS OF NORTH AMERICAN RODENTS
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EXCEPTIONALLY WELL PRESERVED LATEST MIOCENE (HEMPHILLIAN) RODENT BURROWS FROM THE EASTERN GREAT PLAINS, UNITED STATES, AND A REVIEW OF THE BURROWS OF NORTH AMERICAN RODENTS

机译:来自美国东部大平原的保存最完好的最新中新世(汉普伦)啮齿类动物成虫以及北美洲啮齿类动物的成虫综述

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Dozens of well-preserved fossil burrow systems in upper Miocene sedimentary rocks of the Ogallala Group at a site in east-central Nebraska record rodent behavior and the subsurface ecology of grasslands just as the modern Great Plains was developing. These burrow systems include one to four entrance or exit tunnels, large underground nesting chambers at depths of several decimeters below ancient land surfaces, and incisor grooves on the walls. Tunnels average 89.8 mm in diameter, a value similar to the burrow diameters of multiple living North American rodents. Chambers vary in shape and typically exceed 500 mm in length; some attain 1000 mm in length. Living marmotine ground squirrels (tribe Marmotini) construct burrow systems of varying degrees of complexity, but they do not engage in shallow subsurface foraging. Extinct members of this group were the most likely excavators of the fossil burrows. In contrast, extant pocket gophers (family Geomyidae) and, presumably their fossil relatives, are obligate subterranean animals that produce linked deep and shallow burrow subsystems, the latter representing their chief foraging strategy. Our results raise issues regarding the relationships between the architecture of fossil rodent burrow systems and aspects of rodent behavior and life history, such as litter size, developmental rates, seasonal torpor, hibernation, and sociality in grasslands. An improved understanding of the burrowing behaviors of ancient rodents will highly complement the growing body of knowledge about the development of grasslands on Earth over time, but truly ichnological analyses of the burrows and burrowing behaviors of extant rodents are much needed.
机译:内布拉斯加州中东部某地的奥加拉拉群中新世上新世沉积岩中数十个保存完好的化石洞穴系统记录了啮齿动物的行为和草原的地下生态,正如现代大平原的发展一样。这些洞穴系统包括一到四个入口或出口隧道,在古代陆地表面以下几分米深度的大型地下筑巢室以及墙壁上的门牙槽。隧道的平均直径为89.8毫米,该值类似于北美多只活生鼠的洞穴直径。腔室形状各异,长度通常超过500毫米;有些长度达到1000毫米。活的ground猴松鼠(Marmotini部落)构建了复杂程度不同的洞穴系统,但它们不参与地下地下觅食。该群体的绝种成员是最有可能挖掘化石洞穴的人。相反,现存的袋鼠(土龟科)及其大概的化石亲属是专性的地下动物,它们产生相连的深和浅的洞穴子系统,后者代表了它们的主要觅食策略。我们的研究结果提出了有关化石啮齿动物洞穴系统的结构与啮齿动物行为和生活史方面之间的关系的问题,例如凋落物的大小,发育速度,季节性to,冬眠和草原的社会性。对古代啮齿动物的穴居行为的深入了解将极大地补充随着时间的推移,有关地球上草原发展的知识的增长,但是,真正需要对现存啮齿动物的穴位和穴居行为进行鸟类学分析。

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