Development of a morphological key for the southern salt marsh harvest mouse using genetically verified individuals

Author:

Statham Mark J.1ORCID,Barthman-Thompson Laureen2,Fresquez Susan1,Sacks Benjamin N.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of California, Davis

2. California Department of Fish and Wildlife

Abstract

The salt marsh harvest mouse (SMHM; Reithrodontomys raviventris) is a state and federally listed endangered species endemic to the coastal marshes of the San Francisco Estuary of California. Of two subspecies, the southern (R. r. raviventris) is most endangered and lacks reliable morphological field tools to distinguish from the sympatric western harvest mouse (WHM; R. megalotis). We trapped and collected genetic samples and morphological data from 204 harvest mice from 14 locations from across the range of the southern SMHM. Genetic species identification indicated these to be composed of 48 SMHM and 156 WHM, which we compared at ten morphological characters. Most continuous characters overlapped between species. Color characters were significantly differentiated and we identified a number of species-specific diagnostic pelage categories in both species. A random forest analysis indicated that ventral coloration of the abdomen and the ventral tail hair color were the most useful for differentiating between species. We used these two morphological characters to develop a decision tree which correctly classified 94% of harvest mice to species with 99% accuracy. These findings suggest that our decision tree can be used to reliably identify the species of most harvest mice in the range of the southern SMHM, with a small proportion (6% in our study) needing genetic confirmation. The decision tree should be tested on additional harvest mice that were not used in its development, particularly from novel locations across the range.

Publisher

California Fish and Wildlife Journal, California Department of Fish and Wildlife

Reference15 articles.

1. Breiman, L. 2001. Random Forests. Machine Learning 45:5.

2. Brown, S. K. 2003. Conservation genetics of salt marsh harvest mice (Reithrodontomys raviventris) in Suisun Marsh, CA. Thesis, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, CA, USA.

3. Fisler, G. F. 1963. Effects of salt water on food and water consumption and weight of harvest mice. Ecology 44:604–608.

4. Fisler, G. F. 1965. Adaptations and speciation in harvest mice of the marshes of San Francisco Bay. University of California Publications in Zoology 77:1–108.

5. Jameson, E. W., and H. J. Peeters. 2004. Mammals of California. University of California Press, Berkeley, CA, USA.

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