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Draft:Spermophilus citelloides

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Spermophilus citelloides
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Rodentia
Family: Sciuridae
Genus: Spermophilus
Species:
S. citelloides
Binomial name
Spermophilus citelloides
Kormos, 1916
Synonyms

Citellus citelloides (Gromov, 1965)

Spermophilus citelloides is an extinct species of ground squirrel in the squirrel family (Sciuridae). It was distributed in Central and Eastern Europe from the middle Pleistocene (Holsteinian) to the early Holocene. A 2019 study recovered it as most closely related to the speckled ground squirrel (S. suslicus).

Taxonomy and systematics

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Spermophilus citelloides was preliminarily described by the Hungarian palaeontologist Tivadar Kormos in 1916. At the time, Kormos had only limited material at hand, but tentatively identified the species as a potential ancestor of the recent European ground squirrel (S. citellus), hence the name citelloides (meaning citellus-like). He did, however, note a similarity with the speckled ground squirrel as well.[1] In the aftermath, S. citelloides received little scientific attention, and authors variably followed Kormos' reasoning, emphasised a closer relationship to the speckled ground squirrel, or saw in S. citelloides a common ancestor of both. It was not until 2019 that, this time with more diagnostic material, a team of researchers scrutinised S. citelloides again. They re-described the species and established a close relationship with the speckled ground squirrel[1] (The Podolian ground squirrel (S. odessanus) was only more recently recognised as different from the speckled ground squirrel, and is considered as conspecific to it in these accounts). This study also confirmed that the species is not an ancestor to either the European or the speckled ground squirrel, but most likely shares a direct common ancestor with the latter. This ancestor may be the earlier European species S. primigenius, or possibly a transitional form that awaits description still, and is currently treated as S. aff. primigenius.[2] S. citelloides, therefore, became extinct without descendent in the early Holocene.

Description

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The Pannonian souslik was a medium-sized species of souslik, with an estimated size similar to that of the European souslik.[1][3] Its skull is estimated to be 42–44 millimetres (1.7–1.7 in) in length, larger than in the European and the speckled souslik, but smaller than large, Asiatic species such as the russet (S. major), yellow (S. fulvus) and relict ground squirrel (S. relictus). It is similar in morphology to the European souslik and, in particular, to the speckled souslik, but exhibits features that characterise it as a distinct species.[1]

Distribution and habitat

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S. citelloides is known from a number of localities. Most of these are located in the Pannonian Basin, with others scattered further into Germany, Poland and Dobruja, suggesting that the species was relatively widespread, but generally only west of the Carpathian Mountains.[4] Ground squirrels today exhibit strict allopatry, meaning that their ranges generally do not overlap extensively (compare sympatry), and this seems to have also been the case in the Pleistocene.[4] To the south, S. citelloides' range bordered the Danube, as well as the European ground squirrel's range, which at the time was only distributed in the southern Balkans.[5][3] In the east, S. citelloides' range was apparently limited by the Carpathian Mountains, and by the Podolian ground squirrel.[4] At a number of sites S. citelloides coexisted, however, with the larger, also extinct S. superciliosus, which is considered to be closely related to the yellow ground squirrel of Central Asia.[6] This coexistence was apparently made possible by the considerable size difference between the two species, as per Hutchinson's rule.[4] This is also the case today between the little ground squirrel (S. pygmaeus) and the yellow ground squirrel, for example, across much of western Central Asia.[7]

Like its modern relatives, S. citelloides probably inhabited open grassland and steppe habitats. Moreover, modern Spermophilus species are strongly reliant on short-grass habitats and low vegetation cover, and are therefore frequently associated with large grazers such as cattle, horses and saiga antelope.[4][8] When grazing animals are absent and the vegetation grows taller, sousliks are more exposed to predation by their many predators – such as the steppe polecat, marbled polecat, steppe eagle and imperial eagle – as their vision and their alarm call system is impeded. This may lead to population declines and extinctions.[9][10] On the other hand, sousliks may tolerate high levels of grazing pressure, and outcompete smaller steppe rodents, such as voles, pikas, hamsters and jerboas, under these conditions.[8] It is likely that S. citelloides had similar requirements in this respect.

Extinction and replacement

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The Pannonian souslik disappears from the fossil record in the early Holocene, after the end of the Last Ice Age. Its extinction precedes the extinction of other steppe rodents from the Pannonian Basin: a European close relative of the narrow-headed vole (Lasiopodomys anglicus), the steppe pika (Ochotona pusilla) and the bobak marmot (Marmoata bobak).[11][12] The Pannonian souslik's extinction has been suggested to be related to the collapse of grazing regimes in the wake of megafauna extinctions in the Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene, leading to a decline in grazing pressure and, consequently, higher vegetation cover, to which sousliks are especially vulnerable. The later spread of the European souslik into the Pannonian Basin and Central Europe is associated with the movements of Neolithic farming communities and their livestock along the Danube, which triggered vegetational changes that would have benefitted sousliks once more.[5] Still, the European souslik was most lkely only able to expand its range further north only due to the Pannonian souslik's earlier extinction.[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Sinitsa, Maxim V.; Virág, Attila; Pazonyi, Piroska; Knitlová, Markéta (2021-01-02). "Redescription and phylogenetic relationships of Spermophilus citelloides (Rodentia: Sciuridae: Xerinae), a ground squirrel from the Middle Pleistocene – Holocene of Central Europe". Historical Biology. 33 (1): 19–39. Bibcode:2021HBio...33...19S. doi:10.1080/08912963.2019.1677640. ISSN 0891-2963.
  2. ^ Sinitsa, Maxim V.; Pogodina, Nataliya V. (2019). "The evolution of early Spermophilus in eastern Europe and the antiquity of the Old World ground squirrels". Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 63 (3): 643–667. doi:10.4202/app.00605.2019.
  3. ^ a b Sebe, Krisztina; Csillag, Gábor; Pazonyi, Piroska; Ruszkiczay-Rüdiger, Zsófia (2021-01-02). "Quaternary evolution of the river Danube in the central Pannonian Basin and its possible role as an ecological barrier to the dispersal of ground squirrels". Historical Biology. 33 (1): 116–135. Bibcode:2021HBio...33..116S. doi:10.1080/08912963.2019.1666838. ISSN 0891-2963.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Popova, L. V.; Maul, L. C.; Zagorodniuk, I. V.; Veklych, Yu. M.; Shydlovskiy, P. S.; Pogodina, N. V.; Bondar, K. M.; Strukova, T. V.; Parfitt, S. A. (2019-03-10). "'Good fences make good neighbours': Concepts and records of range dynamics in ground squirrels and geographical barriers in the Pleistocene of the Circum-Black Sea area". Quaternary International. BRIDGING EUROPE AND ASIA: QUATERNARY STRATIGRAPHY AND PALAEOLITHIC HUMAN OCCUPATION. 509: 103–120. Bibcode:2019QuInt.509..103P. doi:10.1016/j.quaint.2018.03.023. ISSN 1040-6182.
  5. ^ a b Rammou, Dimitra-Lida; Karaiskou, Nikoleta; Minoudi, Styliani; Kazilas, Christos; Moulisatnos, Aristotelis; Gkagkavouzis, Konstantinos; Ćirović, Duško; Nikolić, Tijana; Ćosić, Nada; Youlatos, Dionisios; Triantafyllidis, Alexandros (June 2023). "Phylogeography of the European ground squirrel, Spermophilus citellus (Rodentia: Sciuridae), in the Balkans". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. 139 (2): 158–172. doi:10.1093/biolinnean/blad021.
  6. ^ Popova, L. V. (2016-10-28). "Evolutionary lineage of Spermophilus superciliosus – S. fulvus (Rodentia, Sciuridae) in the quaternary of the Dnieper area: An ability of a biostratigraphical implication". Quaternary International. The Quaternary of the Urals: Global trends and Pan-European Quaternary records. 420: 319–328. Bibcode:2016QuInt.420..319P. doi:10.1016/j.quaint.2015.10.104. ISSN 1040-6182.
  7. ^ Simonov, Evgeniy; Lopatina, Natalia V.; Titov, Sergey V.; Ivanova, Anastasiya D.; Brandler, Oleg V.; Surin, Vadim L.; Matrosova, Vera A.; Dvilis, Alisa E.; Oreshkova, Nataliya V.; Kapustina, Svetlana Yu.; Golenishchev, Fedor N.; Ermakov, Oleg A. (2024-06-01). "Traditional multilocus phylogeny fails to fully resolve Palearctic ground squirrels (Spermophilus) relationships but reveals a new species endemic to West Siberia". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 195: 108057. Bibcode:2024MolPE.19508057S. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2024.108057. ISSN 1055-7903. PMID 38471598.
  8. ^ a b Cao, Chan; Shuai, Ling-Ying; Xin, Xiao-Ping; Liu, Zhi-Tao; Song, Yan-Ling; Zeng, Zhi-Gao (2016-08-23). "Effects of cattle grazing on small mammal communities in the Hulunber meadow steppe". PeerJ. 4: e2349. doi:10.7717/peerj.2349. ISSN 2167-8359.
  9. ^ Surkova, Elena; Popov, Sergey; Tchabovsky, Andrey (2019). "Rodent burrow network dynamics under human-induced landscape transformation from desert to steppe in Kalmykian rangelands". Integrative Zoology. 14 (4): 410–420. doi:10.1111/1749-4877.12392. ISSN 1749-4877. PMID 30983144.
  10. ^ Koshkina, Alyona; Freitag, Martin; Grigoryeva, Irina; Hölzel, Norbert; Stirnemann, Ingrid; Velbert, Frederike; Kamp, Johannes (2023). "Post-Soviet fire and grazing regimes govern the abundance of a key ecosystem engineer on the Eurasian steppe, the yellow ground squirrel Spermophilus fulvus". Diversity and Distributions. 29 (3): 395–408. Bibcode:2023DivDi..29..395K. doi:10.1111/ddi.13668. ISSN 1472-4642.
  11. ^ Németh, Attila; Bárány, Annamária; Csorba, Gábor; Magyari, Enikö; Pazonyi, Piroska; Pálfy, József (2017). "Holocene mammal extinctions in the Carpathian Basin: a review". Mammal Review. 47 (1): 38–52. doi:10.1111/mam.12075. ISSN 1365-2907.
  12. ^ Baca, Mateusz; Popović, Danijela; Lemanik, Anna; Baca, Katarzyna; Horáček, Ivan; Nadachowski, Adam (2019-11-28). "Highly divergent lineage of narrow-headed vole from the Late Pleistocene Europe". Scientific Reports. 9 (1): 17799. Bibcode:2019NatSR...917799B. doi:10.1038/s41598-019-53937-1. ISSN 2045-2322. PMID 31780683.