Eligmodontia
The genus Eligmodontia consists of five or six species of South American sigmodontine mice restricted to Bolivia, Chile, and Argentina. Species of Eligmodontia occur along the eastern side of the Andes Mountains, in Patagonia, and in the Chaco thorn forest of South America. They can be found in arid and semiarid habitats and in both high and low elevation areas. These rodents are commonly known as gerbil mice or by their local name lauchas. Sometimes they are also called silky desert mice, highland desert mice or silky-footed mice. The closest living relatives are probably the chaco mice, the leaf-eared mice, and Salinomys.
Taxonomy, systematics and evolution
The genus receives its name from the occlusal pattern of the molars and is derived from the Ancient Greek eliktos and odontas.The systematics and taxonomy of Eligmodontia have been complicated. The first specimen was acquired by Charles Darwin in 1835 at Bahía Blanca, during his five-year journey on HMS Beagle. It was formally described by George R. Waterhouse as Mus elegans in February 1837, just weeks after the formal description of E. typus by Frédéric Cuvier, from a specimen that he had received from Buenos Aires and which was collected six months after Darwin's. The two taxa were later synonymized and represent the same species.
Systematics
Eligmodontia belongs to the subfamily Sigmodontinae and the tribe Phyllotini. Eight species of Eligmodontia have been described, three of these containing two subspecies each. In a 1962 revision of the tribe Phyllotini, Philip Hershkovitz synonymized all 10 named forms of Eligmodontia known by then into a single species with two subspecies. The lighter and larger northern populations were known as Eligmodontia typus puerulus, and the darker and smaller southern ones as E. typus typus. For nearly 30 years, Hershkovitz's approach was followed until karyotypes and molecular data became available. Today, five distinct karyotypes have been described, and as many distinct clades have been found.The following 5 species can be unequivocally recognized:
- Monte Gerbil Mouse or Monte Laucha, Eligmodontia moreni
- Andean Gerbil Mouse or Altiplano Laucha, Eligmodontia puerulus
- Eligmodontia hirtipes
- Morgan's Gerbil Mouse or Western Patagonian Laucha, Eligmodontia morgani
- Eastern Patagonian Laucha, Eligmodontia typus
- Highland Gerbil Mouse, Eligmodontia bolsonensis Mares, Braun, Coyner & van den Bussche, 2008
Altogether, this seems to represent a case of ongoing parapatric speciation, with a population of E. typus becoming separated at the northern and upper limit of its range not more than a few 100,000 years ago. Whether they are to be treated as species or subspecies is essentially a matter of what species concept one prefers. Additionally, it appears that the karyotype reported for E. typus originates from the upland population, and that the karyotype of E. typus proper is unknown.