Taylor, P. J.Baxter, R. M.Nengovhela, Aluwani2015-02-262015-02-262015-02-26Nengovhela, A. 2015. Investigating past, present and future distributions of cryptic species of vlei rats (otomys auratus, o. irroratus s.s and o. angoniensis) in South Africa, with a focus on Limpopo Province. . . http://hdl.handle.net/11602/277http://hdl.handle.net/11602/277MENVSCDepartment of Ecology an Resource ManagementHow the living world will respond to changes in climate is still a pressing issue to biologists today. This study investigated past, present and potential future di.stribution of three cryptic species of Afromontane rodents (Otomys auratus, 0. angoniensis and 0. irroratus s.s); as well as geographical and temporal trends of two species (0. auratus and 0. angoniensis). Investigation of past distributions included two species only (0. auratus and 0. angoniensis) in the northern escarpment (Limpopo, Gauteng, North West and Mpumalanga Provinces); current and potential future distribution considered the South African range of all the three species (Otomys auratus, 0. angoniensis and 0. irroratus s.s). We assessed the potential impact of changes in future climate on 0. auratus, 0. angoniensis and 0. irroratus s.s using predictive niche modelling. Distributional data were obtained from: field trapping, owl pellets analysis and Museum records [Ditsong National Museum of Natural History (formerly Transvaal, TM) and Durban Natural Science Museum (DM)]. Maximum Entropy (Maxent) was used to model the current distrib�tion of all three species. A general circulation model was used to predict the distribution of these species in 2070. Each of the three species is associated with a particular Biome i.e. 0. irroratus s.s is associated mostly with Fynbos and Thicket Biomes, 0. auratus with Grassland Biome and 0. angoniensis with Savannah Biome and we predict that their distribution will follow those predicted for their respective Biomes. Niche models were found to follow biome boundaries of each species. This scenario predicted a south east shift (auratus), a south west shift (angoniensis) and a shrink (irroratus s.s) in future distribution, according to each species preferred habitat. A concomitant 66% (auratus) and 36% (irroratus s.s) reduction in areas of high environmental suitability of these species is shown, with a I % gain in angoniensis. High rainfall and low temperatures modulated the distribution of both auratus and irroratus s.s while angoniensis was high rainfall and high temperatures. And this was consistent with the ecological requirements of each species. No historical distribution changes were documented in Rietvlei Nature Reserve and at the Waterberg Mountain Range for angoniensis and auratus when tested in Chi-square tests but changes were observed at the Soutpansberg Mountain Range. This study found that both multivariate and univariate morphometric approaches support the fact that cranial size (and presumable therefore body size) in 0. auratus but not in 0. angoniensis, is showing some response to climate variables, even within the restricted northern South African region (former Transvaal). Skull size of O. auratus decreased significantly in relation to the year of collection and was also significantly and positively related to latitude, thus conforming to Bergmann's rule.1 online resource (xii, 105 leaves): color illustrations, color mapsenUniversity of VendaO. auratusUCTDO. irroratus s.sO. angoniensisClimate warmingBody sizeLatitude363.780968257Rats -- South Africa -- LimpopoInvestigating past, present and future distributions of cryptic species of vlei rats (otomys auratus, o. irroratus s.s and o. angoniensis) in South Africa, with a focus on Limpopo ProvinceDissertationNengovhela A. Investigating past, present and future distributions of cryptic species of vlei rats (otomys auratus, o. irroratus s.s and o. angoniensis) in South Africa, with a focus on Limpopo Province. []. , 2015 [cited yyyy month dd]. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/11602/277Nengovhela, A. (2015). <i>Investigating past, present and future distributions of cryptic species of vlei rats (otomys auratus, o. irroratus s.s and o. angoniensis) in South Africa, with a focus on Limpopo Province</i>. (). . Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/11602/277Nengovhela, Aluwani. <i>"Investigating past, present and future distributions of cryptic species of vlei rats (otomys auratus, o. irroratus s.s and o. angoniensis) in South Africa, with a focus on Limpopo Province."</i> ., , 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/11602/277TY - Dissertation AU - Nengovhela, Aluwani DA - 2015-02-26 DB - ResearchSpace DP - Univen KW - O. auratus KW - O. irroratus s.s KW - O. angoniensis KW - Climate warming KW - Body size KW - Latitude LK - https://univendspace.univen.ac.za PY - 2015 T1 - Investigating past, present and future distributions of cryptic species of vlei rats (otomys auratus, o. irroratus s.s and o. angoniensis) in South Africa, with a focus on Limpopo Province TI - Investigating past, present and future distributions of cryptic species of vlei rats (otomys auratus, o. irroratus s.s and o. angoniensis) in South Africa, with a focus on Limpopo Province UR - http://hdl.handle.net/11602/277 ER -